Not Excited About Becoming FNP

Nurses General Nursing

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Like many younger nurses I have had the drive to continue my education. Less than a year after getting my RN-diploma I enrolled in a RN-BSN program. After being a nurse for only 3 years I enrolled in an FNP program. Here's the thing, I can't tell you WHY I enrolled in an FNP program. Sure, I wanted to continue my education, I thought I wanted to have more career opportunities, all those things that everyone says. But there is a problem.

I love being a bedside nurse. I love being on the front line working in the hospital and being the face that patient's see. I love learning and perfecting my skills that only a bedside nurse would use, like IV starts. I look forward to going to work.

I hear many of my co-workers that are younger saying how they can't wait to get away from the bedside and how exciting it must be for me to be almost done with my degree. I see other nurses I know graduate NP programs and get jobs, and while congratulating them all I can think is how boring their new position sounds.

I am doing great in my NP program and have an A average with a 3.75 GPA. I intend on graduating I am just not sure I actually want to use my degree as it was intended. For the part of the country I am in, I would expect a generous raise to go from RN to FNP, but money isn't what it is all about. I find myself thinking about certifcations and other things I had still hoped to obtain as an RN that I may not have time to obtain before I become an FNP.

Has anyone else felt this way or is it just me?

NP and RN roles are different. I would recommend you finish what you started but keep doing what you love to do. in the future you may want to do the transition into NP. God bless you for loving bedside nursing. I couldnt wait to be done with it personally but different strokes for different folks.

That's easy!

RN = while you're young

NP = when you're getting older (less back ache)

Specializes in Acute Care Cardiac, Education, Prof Practice.
Was the link to the article removed? I am interested in reading more about the CNS role..

Sorry I added it in. I forgot it!

Not even sure it's about age. I just love the problem solving and hate the customer service part of nursing.

Specializes in Pediatric/Adolescent, Med-Surg.
That's easy!

RN = while you're young

NP = when you're getting older (less back ache)

Haha, I always said this was one of the reasons I was perusing my NP. I already have arthritis from back breaking RN work, and I know it won't get any easier as I get older.

Specializes in Acute Care Psych, DNP Student.

I'm at the beginning of a DNP program. The tuition for this program will be approximately $80,000. It gave me pause when I figured out that I currently earn what a beginning NP makes in my area - but as a staff RN.

It does give me pause to spend 4 years of my life on grad school and so much in tuition dollars when I'm already earning low-range NP pay. What keeps me going is that I want to operate in the NP role. I do think some RNs don't realize how providers have to hustle to see enough patients during their work days, though. I don't think the grass is necessarily greener as an NP - just different.

Specializes in Acute Care Cardiac, Education, Prof Practice.
I'm at the beginning of a DNP program. The tuition for this program will be approximately $80,000. It gave me pause when I figured out that I currently earn what a beginning NP makes in my area - but as a staff RN.

It does give me pause to spend 4 years of my life on grad school and so much in tuition dollars when I'm already earning low-range NP pay. What keeps me going is that I want to operate in the NP role. I do think some RNs don't realize how providers have to hustle to see enough patients during their work days, though. I don't think the grass is necessarily greener as an NP - just different.

Not to derail but I recently looked at the price on the DNP as well. Cappella has an online program at $800+ per credit, came out to around $47K + retreats etc. I think I will just wait until someone else wants to pay for it :)

Specializes in Pediatric/Adolescent, Med-Surg.
I'm at the beginning of a DNP program. The tuition for this program will be approximately $80,000. It gave me pause when I figured out that I currently earn what a beginning NP makes in my area - but as a staff RN.

It does give me pause to spend 4 years of my life on grad school and so much in tuition dollars when I'm already earning low-range NP pay. What keeps me going is that I want to operate in the NP role. I do think some RNs don't realize how providers have to hustle to see enough patients during their work days, though. I don't think the grass is necessarily greener as an NP - just different.

Multicollinearity,

For you, then, it sounds like an NP role is exactly what you want. I am glad that my FNP will only cost me $35k and that I have been able to swing it without taking out any student loans.

thanks for the post. I was planning to go directly to MSN as soon as I graduate from BSN program since my GRE is going to expire next year. However, I'm not sure which field I want to go into. Now I think I should work as a RN for a couple of years and find a field I really enjoy. Work drives desire for education, not the other way around. thanks and best of luck

Specializes in Acute Care Cardiac, Education, Prof Practice.
Work drives desire for education, not the other way around. thanks and best of luck

I agree Tree! I know I got a lot more out of my RN-MSN after working for several years. It was all so applicable!

Specializes in Pediatrics.

I am really enjoying this thread. As an AD turned BSN turned MS, hoping to turn PhD, I would never discourage anyone from pursuing higher education. However, I feel there is way too much pressure to go beyond the traditional RN role for anyone who has started school in the last 10 years. When I started my MS, I began in an NP program (then switched to education). I was shocked at how many green RNs were in the program. Many will argue that you don't need experience to be an NP because they are so different. I beg to differ. I can't tell you how many NPs end up teaching because they either can't find an NP job, or they realized that in many areas, NPs are glorified residents (their words, not mine). So they end up teaching clinicals or lectures with barely any bedside RN experience.

The other thing, for the OP: our society is full of expectations, especially for us women. When are you going to get married, when are you going to have a baby, when are you going to have another baby, when are you going to buy a house, etc. people look at these milestones as natural progressions in life. I got remarried 2 years ago, already had a child. He did not. I still get "aren't you going to have any kids, I'm sure he wants one of his own". Nope, we're good. People must think we are infertile or something. Because how can anyone not want a million kids??? Just like how can any young RN not want to become an NP? I would never cross my mind to assume that every RN aspires to reach, or to go into administration, so why is it so different for NP?

Do what feels right for you. You'll always have that NP license and degree in your back pocket.

Specializes in Pediatric/Adolescent, Med-Surg.

Prof4RN,

Thank you so much for your words of encouragement. I have thought about teaching clinicals with my MSN, and by the time I graduate my MSN program I will have 6 years experience.

Your opinions sound similar to my husband's theory that maybe I enrolled in a MSN program because it seemed like the next logical career step. I also wanted to get another degree out of the way before I started having kids.

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