Published
The Journal of School Nursing published an article December 2009 about the education requirements in each state: Sign In — The Journal of School Nursing
Praeger, S., & Zimmerman, B. (2009). State regulations for school nursing practice , Journal of School Nursing, 25: 466-477.
"A baccalaureate degree for the RN was specified in 25 states; 9 of those states
stipulate the baccalaureate degree needs to be in nursing (BSN) or its equivalent"
Not only a BSN here in CA . . .but you have to have your school nurse certification which means more college classes.
You can get a temporary permit and take 5 years to get your schooling completed.
The pay is not that great but you do get medical/dental/vision/life insurance. And you get to spend more time with your own children. It works for now.
Plus - I did ER, L&D, med-surg for almost 10 years. 12 hours shift. Worked weekends and holidays. I would never want to go back to that.
nurse1109
22 Posts
Hi everyone. I am currently an associates degree RN thinking about going back to school for my BSN. In nursing school my best clinical days were school nursing, I loved it! These jobs are hard to come by though. Do most schools want BSN nurses? The pay does not seem that great. Just curious what some of your salaries are and do you get the same benefits as the teachers? (I am learning money is not everything though as I am always tired and stressed from my hospital bedside staff nurse job!)