MCPHS in a nutshell

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Hello. Considering it is often difficult to find information on some nursing programs, I thought I would share my experience about visiting this school.

MCPHS, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, is one of the oldest pharmacy (PharmD) schools in the country. They also offer a MASTERS in Physician Assistant, a 16 month Accelerated BSN program (Fall start at the Manchester campus, Spring start at the Worcester campus), a MASTERS in family NP, and a traditional four year BSN at their Boston Campus (next door to Harvard). While it is a small school, they have the 6th largest endowment in the country. I recently visited the Worcester, MA campus to which I was accepted and this is what I think:

- The facilities, mostly located in about three buildings which sit across the street from a hospital, are absolutely immaculate. The buildings are new and gorgeous. The technology is STATE OF THE ART. The labs are set up like hospital rooms, with top of the line simulation "dummies" who do all the things a real patient would do. All the equipment you would find in a hospital room are in the labs and fully functional. The classrooms are also state of the art, with clickers being connected to the overhead projector so that students can answer questions Jeopardy style! Everything inside this school is clean, modern, and visually impressive. The staff are incredibly friendly and kind.

- This school is a school that focuses solely on graduate health professions. At the Worcester campus, all of the programs are accelerated, so the student body averages between the ages of 26-28 and everyone at the facility has a prior degree. There is an academic focus and BSN students have the opportunity to get published. As a part of the dress code, all students at the Worcester campus have to wear MCPHS white lab coats, including nursing students, which really conveys the professional impression of the nursing program.

- There are about 50-55 students in the accelerated BSN program. Only about 3 fall out of sequence a year (read: FAIL), which means they have to remediate in to the class a year behind them. The teachers are highly supportive and become close with students. The teachers work with the students and do not "leave them hanging". They go with them to their clinicals. They will advocate for you in the hospitals.

- MCPHS is front loaded. In each course, you learn all the classroom material for the first few weeks, take exams, practice in the lab, and then the next few weeks you are fully immersed in clinicals. Thus, you will not have classwork and clinical at the same time, and you will not be unprepared for clinical because you "haven't gotten to that chapter yet".

- According to the tour guide, if you are having trouble and seek out the teacher's help early, there is no reason why you would be failed. It seems that this is a supportive environment in which everyone wants the students to succeed and become excellent, proficient, respected nurses. Thus far, they have graduated 7 classes, and have full accreditation. For the past 2 years their NCLEX pass rate has been 100%. They do have the HESI exam system in place.

About Worcester, MA:

Pros:

- Located near 7 other colleges: Clark, Assumption, Holy Cross, WPI and UMASS Medical School to name a few. The school is across the street from a new hospital (St. Vincents), there are other state and psychiatric facilities close by, and UMASS Memorial Hospital is a five minute drive. The area is heavily populated by biotechnology companies, so healthcare and science is what draws people to this city.

- It is 40 minutes from Boston and 40 minutes from Providence, RI, and there is a train station close to the school which can take you to these places. The drive from NY is about 3 hours. It is even closer to CT.

- A 3-5 minute drive from the school is Shrewbury St which is Worcesters "restaurant row". Lots of cute restaurants and bars and grills. A 5-10 minute ride from the school is a strip with all the amenities..movie theaters, best buys, k-marts, cell phone stores, supermarkets...

Cons:

Downtown Worcester, where the school is located, SUCKS. Not too far down Main Street is a ghetto neighborhood (think hookers and crackheads). There are a plethora of liquor stores, check cashing, and pawn shops. I saw MANY drug addicts on the street - this was either due to the proximity to the ghetto neighborhood (copping drugs) or the proximity to the rehab facilities. There is definitely a shady element to downtown Worcester. There are beautiful buildings architecturally (like the court house and the churches and the park). There are normal working people walking around downtown during the day, but supposedly the area becomes desolate at night and most people recommend that you don't walk around alone. Overall, Downtown Worcester is the biggest drawback to what appears to be a FABULOUS school.

If anyone has any other questions, please let me know. I have not decided whether or not I will attend yet. As a disclaimer, this is based on my personal opinions :-)

El

Hey everyone. I just applied to MCPHS so I won't know for a few weeks. I've enjoyed reading everyone's opinions and etc. about the school. I'm confused by the post saying $98,000? Is this the cost you found for the Accelerated BSN program there? I contacted admissions and they quoted $52,000 for the whole program, so now I'm a bit confused. It's more than possible I've just misread though! If not, could someone tell me where they got this price from?

i should've included this in my previous post, but this is the information i received about tuition from the admissions staff a few weeks ago:

spring 2011 (16 credits) $12,350

summer 2011 (12 credits) $11,100

fall 2011 (18 credits) $12,350 + 3% = $12, 750

spring 2012 (18 credits) $12,350 + 3% = $12, 750

total tuition 2011-12 $48, 950

fees per semester (no increase figured in)service fee $260 x 4 = $1040

clinical fee $280 x 4 = $1120

total fees 2011-12 $2160

program tuition and fee total $51, 110

Hi! I am also curious about the actual cost of the program. Does anybody have any more info? I am going to try to meet with the financial offices soon..

Thanks!!

Hey, they sent out the tuition price and for the spring 2011 semester it's going to be $13,995 not including health insurance which is $952 or supplies. I think the rough overall cost at this point in time is around $55,000.

Hi guys! I applied for the 2011 Fall start in Manchester- how has the program been going so far? Are you all happy? How are classes? Any and all advice and details are appreciated : )

Specializes in Psych; Med/Surg; Rehab.

]elleny or NYCClara, could you please tell me what the program is like for you so far? I'm really curious about it and would love to hear from those experiencing it. (The price tag is the only scary thing I've seen so far :crying2:)

]

]Anyone else who's in the program or already finished I would love to hear what else you have to say about it :-)

Hi Everyone,

I am enrolled in the MCPHS FNP program starting this fall, but most of the classes are online. The cost for the graduate program BSN to MSN FNP is about $36,000. I work with a nurse who graduated from there ABSN program and loved it. Any other FNP students out there?

]elleny or NYCClara, could you please tell me what the program is like for you so far? I'm really curious about it and would love to hear from those experiencing it. (The price tag is the only scary thing I've seen so far :crying2:)

]

]Anyone else who's in the program or already finished I would love to hear what else you have to say about it :-)

Hi I got an email from the admission department and she qouted the total cost of the programm around $51,000

Clara -

Glad to see someone else from NYC might be attending..I joined the FB group for Jan 2011 start (students who submitted their deposit already), and so far I'm the only NYCer. Depending on where you live, it is feasible to walk from where you live/school/campus. Note that the campus is basically a few buildings in Downtown Worcester, so it's not a campus in the traditional sense. I know that there are taxis and buses, but the system is not as convenient as the NYC subway or anything. There's also a train that goes to NY and Boston that's pretty close. The people in admissions suggested that you do have a car, only because most things like grocery stores, movies, and even clinicals are driving distance. Although Worcester is a city, anywhere outside of downtown seems pretty suburban to me...So that if your clinical is at UMass Memorial, which is 5 minutes away, you will still need to drive there.. (although there may be a bus going there)...I think that being without a car would be doable, but probably difficult and far from ideal. I heard the winters can be abysmal there so that's another thing to consider. Friends with cars...a good thing :-P Where would you plan on living? That's important. I think a visit is in order!

Hi, I am from NJ and going to move to MA for my nursing programm. Seems like u are from NY. How are you going to manage? Any suggestions on where to look for rooms to rent?

Specializes in Post Acute, Home, Inpatient, Hospice/Pall Care.

Great info! Thanks :)

Hey if anyone lived in the Lincoln square building, how did you eat!?! If anyone could answer this I would really appreciate it! Also how did you like the rooms there?

Elle,

Thanks so much for your views on the college and Worcester.....please let me know if you have any other thoughts that you would care to share about the school or the City...especially in regards to housing...and if you are planning on going forward. I'm applying for their PA program.

Mark

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