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I just started my second semester of nursing school at a community college. Usually every year 48 students get excepted into this program, however, of that 48 only 15 graduate. This school seems to pride itself in the amount of students they "kick out" each semester. Is this how all nursing schools are? should I consider a different school or stick with it? HELP!
I am also at a community college program (accredited). We start with 120 students a semester....our rate is around 30-35 of that original 120 graduate with their original classmates. That's not to say the rest don't graduate, but they either drop the program or bump down to part time. We have a first-time NCLEX pass rate of 96%. I am in my third semester and there are still people in the program that if I looked up from a gurney holding my severed arm and saw them as the RN, I'd seriously consider what I had at home to patch myself up We are in patho this semester, so I hope those who shouldn't be there will be weeded this semester (I'm not trying to be mean, but you all know the kind of nursing students I am talking about...)
I am confused a few people have said that they had people "transfer in" or "add in" I would assume this was after the point clinicals had started? I thought it was rare for nursing credits to transfer?[/quote']I think Add-Ins are people who failed the previous semester and are coming back.
pookyp, LPN
1,074 Posts
My class was 44 graduated 18. All but a couple were fail outs. Accredited school. 2 entrance tests to get in. Pass rate for nclex is high. Don't know it off the top of my head though. Some people just couldn't keep up.