Hey guys....How do you all support yourselves?

Published

Hey guys,

I've decided to leave the corporate world to pursue nursing. This has been a long time passion for me. My question is, since nursing school is full-time day, how do you all support yourselves?? Any suggestions? I don't even know where or how to begin to look for new employment while in school. I hear you shouldn't work more than part-time hours. Any suggestions are welcomed.

Brian

Specializes in Med surg, cardiac, case management.

Loans, loans, and more loans... ;)

I'm in a grad program, so I get the grad PLUS loan to cover any cost-of-attendance items not satisfied by the Staffords. Anything unexpected comes up and I could get an uncertified private loan, though I'd rather not...

Haven't worked yet, except over Christmas. I probably will work a day or two a week, doing something (hopefully health-related) just to provide some extra cash just in case, and to give me a break from studying.

About bartending...Well, my experience (I worked the bar when I lived in New Orleans) is , I didn't start making a living wage until I worked in a gay bar... Otherwise, only the cute little college girls ever get tips.

Been to many bars in N.O., but I tried not to go to THAT end of Bourbon. Anyway, I have the family and kids thing going on so it's pretty busy. However, I helped with kids and worked while my wife was in school for years. Now as a PA she takes care of us now. Now I need to get through school as she is working on her MD and will need to do her clinicals and then residency for god knows how many years. Oh, well, when can relax when we are old I guess.........right?

Hey, career momentum, go for it, especially if you have a "leapfrog" support system going on! I think we stumbled on another way to pay one's way through school. Oh, and about Bourbon... Yeah, my friends and folks rolled their eyes too, but during circut parties like Decadence, I'd need a small duffel bag to carry all my tips home, no joke. It's a good gig if you can pass up the sauce and can stand the music. (Bartenders shouldn't get too familiar with the patrons anyway, no matter what gender they are, so to me what difference does it make what their personal lives are?)

Specializes in Hospice, Rehab.
Hey guys,

I've decided to leave the corporate world to pursue nursing. This has been a long time passion for me. My question is, since nursing school is full-time day, how do you all support yourselves?? Any suggestions? I don't even know where or how to begin to look for new employment while in school. I hear you shouldn't work more than part-time hours. Any suggestions are welcomed.

Brian

Geez Brian, there's a few of you Richmond folks looking at nursing. I guess credit cards and consumer electronics are feeling the pinch. I'm just up the road from you.

Supporting myself was pretty much a higher priority than nursing school (thank you Dr. Maslow). I was working at my day job as an analyst for a call center. Fortunately, they gave me some latitude to balance out my work schedule but it was hard. Our business is strongly seasonal in the first four months of the year so my spring semesters were mixes of fifty hour work weeks and long nights on the computer, or six hours at job A then off to clinical B. Not impossible, but no room for error. Fortunately all of my kids are the four legged kinds that are not terribly traumatized by crating.

If I hadn't gotten into a new online program in VA, I would have to have followed plan B: Sell house, live in refrigerator box (or van) down by the river, empty out 401K, work until death after graduation.

If there's any way to keep the work going part time, doing what you do well is easier and potentially a lot more lucrative than entry level work in a health care job.

You do learn more working in health care, but there's an upper limit. I have an EMS background. An EMT-Intermediate gets a lot of the same physical assessment training as a first year nurse, but hasn't the depth of knowledge (labs, critical thinking, etc). An EMT's experience in working with patients can be extraordinarily valuable. EMT-I and Paramedic jobs exist in the Virginia hospitals, pay a tad more than CNA work, but because of the odd scope of practice, an EMT will get involved in procedures that even a nurse isn't normally permitted to do on their own. If your time line permits getting some EMT background before you start (Fall 08 or later), it will help both with experience and money. Even as a volunteer EMT, you still gain experience that pays.

An important consideration no one else mentions much is that where you want to work once you are licensed is a factor. Some hospitals pay for their assistive personnel to go to nursing school with a service obligation. Others tend to use externships as recruiting tools. Either way, if you're set on a particular hospital, you will find that working there can be a significant help. I found it much harder to get my first nursing job in the local area because I neither worked for nor took huge loans from the local hospital's foundation. With a nursing educator shortage, they're short on folks to train you, and they want to invest first in the ones with the influence.

A lot of how you proceed should be based on what you can maintain now, and what your program looks like. No nursing program is very positive about working while in school, but all of them admit it has to be. If you're doing an online program, full time is feasible, but don't expect to be top of the class. Mr. 2.987 knows this for a fact.

By the way, it helps to take a massive load of student loan debt. Many hospitals have loan repayment incentives for new grad nurses. If you don't have a loan you don't get any money. Shocking!

But do whatever it takes to become a nurse. It's the best nervous breakdown you'll ever nearly avoid. :bugeyes:

Party Rock!

OldPhatMC, RN sends.

"Graduate of the Commonwealth Nursing Program - Cavy Cohort"

hey there:

I have a domestic partner who works, and he pays most of the bills while I'm in nursing school. (I did same thing for him several years ago, when he was starting a new business and not drawing a salary.)

My situation also a little unique, in that I'm in an "Accelerated BSN Program", especially for career changers. We are "in class/in program" (clinical, class, learning lab,, etc) 32 hrs a week, so MOST people in my 60 person class do not work. I'm also a little fortunate, in that I spent all of 2006 doing my science/nursing pre-reqs and LEGITIMATELY getting NJ Unemployment of $500week = $2000 a month, bkz I was career changing into a "critical occupation" on State of NJ Unemployment Career listing....PLUS, I got a tuition waiver for all my pre-reqs during 2006 at local community college, thanks to this special NJ Unemployment Program for career changers. I felt "blessed" to be able to do so.

Good luck.....oh, I've also taken out $50k in Federal & State student loans.....and use some of that for living money, but heck, have another 20 yrs to pay those back.

Here in N.Ireland luckily we have no school fee's and get paid £500 per month to do the course. If it wasn't for that i dunno what id do!

I pretty much live off the GI Bill. So far I've managed not to touch the money I saved up in Iraq. I try to live as cheap as possible. I rent a room above a garage, eat Ramen and MRE's I still have from the Army. And to make spending cash for the occaisional dvd/video game rental, I deliver pizza a couple nights a week. Not exactly a glamorous lifestyle, but I like to think it will pay off.

my wife--sugar momma!! lol

I'm currently still working full-time in IT while getting everything in place to start nursing school AND putting wife through nursing school.

She has 1 more year to go.

Once she graduates and is employed then she'll be putting me through school.

Share and share alike.

Specializes in Operating Room.

Just to add my two cents into the discussion.

I worked full time days as a Surgical Assistant in the OR before starting nursing school. I was promised a Friday evening 3-11, sat. 7a-7p, and sunday 7a-7p shift, but ending up working 3-11 monday-friday. Still hoping that the weekend shift will work out but until it does, I go to nursing school 7a-2p and work 3p-11:30p.

I try and study as much as I can during my lunch breaks or whenever it's slow in the OR and I read when I get home. With this schedule I won't owe any loans for school but I do not have a life at all!!!:zzzzz

I am in a perpetual state of drowsiness during the week and I try to catch up to my life on the weekends.

I currently live with my parents and commute to school, I also work part time Fri (half day) and Saturday (full day) at a hardware store in order to save up money when I am going to move. It's stressful but definetely doable. I know many people in my school who have it much worse than I do.

+ Join the Discussion