I want to become a nurse..HELP!

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Hello everyone,

my name is Fresia and I'm 17 yrs old and I would like to become a nurse... I have, as of right now, a 3.6 GPA and I would love to get help from all the nurses... I've been looking at colleges and I want to get a bachelor's degree, then a master's and I would love to become a Pediatric Nurse in Oncology someday... I've been reading and I can say I am well informed..but my problem is college!! UCLA or University of Phoenix?! they are not my top choices, but what is the difference? can I make it if I just get into a moderately hard university like Biola or UCI? I live in California and I'm planning to study nearby my home, which is in the OC. Please help me! I need to find one:bluecry1:

Specializes in Psychiatric.

http://www.rn.ca.gov/schools/rnprograms.shtml

That's a list of RN programs approved by CA's Board of Registered Nursing. I would suggest going through the list and looking at the websites of the schools in your area to see how the programs compare.

Do you need to have really high grades to become a nurse? im in highschool myself

Specializes in Ortho/Neuro/Trauma.

It depends on the college of the program you are looking into. I believe in the state of California there are still minimum GPA requirements to get into California State and UC schools (at least there was when I was applying to college 7 years ago). Also depends on how impacted the nursing program is. I don't know of many that take you into the program straight from high school; usually you have to do pre-requisites first and apply to the programs directly if you're admitted to the school as a freshman.

I'm not an expert though, so I would look into the acceptance requirements for individual programs/schools. Just telling ya from my experience applying to UCs and state schools 7 years ago, my 4.1 GPA wasn't good enough for UCLA's biology program, I can't imagine they've gotten any easier.

Community college is also a great option if you don't have the best grades. Colleges look for candidates with college credit hours before highschool students.

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