Online Nursing Schools vs Traditional Schools

The stigma of an online degree remains for some brick and mortar schools. The future of nursing education is online in the 21st century. It is time to recognize the fact that some online schools have a better innovative program than traditional schools. Nurses General Nursing Article

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To become a nurse was not a childhood dream of mine. It was something that I discovered I had a passion for in my early twenties. I had always loved math and science and figured I would become a scientist one day. I fell in love with nursing due to the study of the human body and the art of nursing itself. I have always had a compassion for people especially the older generation.

My family was unable to support me during my early years while pursuing my current dream of becoming a caring professional nurse. I enrolled in a Licensed Practical Nursing program in 2006. The school was over 60 miles one way from my dad's house. In addition, I had to go to the school five days a week while working three different jobs. I was a lower income student that had to struggle to find a foothold in the college education bracket.

Through much hard work, I passed the first two semesters of my practical nursing program. I was on top of the world at this point. I was approached by the director of the program to be grandfathered into the Registered Nurse (RN) program. They were looking to start a two year RN program and we were the guinea pigs. At first I had my reservations, thankfully at the pressing of the director I changed my mind and proceeded with the program. The program required another year of school and funds that I just did not have access to at the time. Thankfully my grades had obtained me a scholastic scholarship to continue for another year. My enthusiasm for nursing continued to be on the rise.

The end of nursing school for the RN program came so fast. It was May of 2008 and I was being pinned with my RN pin. I passed my boards and went on to have six and a half years of good RN experience. My time in the acute care setting for three years taught me much about the truth of nursing. I changed my track and went into long term care with a new sense of direction.

I was back where I started, but this time I would be in the RN role instead of the CNA. It was in this position for four years that I learned much about leadership. In addition, my time in this setting taught me much about nurse burnout. I never wanted to become that nurse. I thought since I had such high hopes about nursing that I would never fall to that excruciating word. I felt like I had lost the ability to care anymore.

Behind my convincing smile, I was deeply hurt by emotions. I was emotionally overwhelmed and I knew that I needed change. I searched for other jobs, but it felt like I needed something more than additional burnout.

I found a nursing program online that would lead me to a Master's of Science in Nursing Education. I had always loved my time in school. The atmosphere of learning, facilitating, and teaching was what excited me the most. I did an enormous amount of research on the program. I was always leery about an online program due to the stigma of an online degree. However, I did my investigation and discovered that the school was fully accredited by one of the major nurse accreditation agencies. In addition, the program was set to be in alignment with the National League for Nursing standards of nurse educators. The school was recognized by the US Department of Education as well.

I enrolled in the program and graduation was before me. The program was intense, and it helped me grow professionally and personally. In the process of obtaining my degree, I discovered I had the ability to think and analyze. I found a new sense of purpose in nursing. I could see myself teaching future nursing students. I realized that I care about their success and that I wanted to see them succeed.

I wanted to teach because I genuinely care about the students and their success. I found out soon enough the dirty truth about teaching in a traditional brick and mortar college. It hurts me say that even in an environment that is a part of highly intelligent individuals, bullying still takes place. I was told that I would not be hired by a local four year university to teach nursing because my degree was from an unknown online school. After all my hard work, I was destroyed on the inside when I discovered this devastating truth about most four year traditional universities.

The hopes of this letter is to educate the nursing profession about the sad reality of bullying in a center for education. The stigma of an online degree remains, even though the program I graduated from was recognized by the White House for what is right in higher education.

This innovative program allowed me to utilize my work experience. Furthermore, I was able to obtain this accredited degree with much flexibility that was customized to me. I fully believe that this program was the perfect one for me.

It is unfortunate that because some institutions do not consider my degree valuable. I will have a higher chance of failure at obtaining a successful career at these types of institutions. Are we not greater than that?

This reminds of a time when grade school children fight over whose lunch is better, or whose clothes are the best. Even though I fought nail and tooth to rise above my circumstances, I was shot down by those who think their degree is better than mine. My hopes is that my degree will lead me to make a significant difference in the lives of future nursing students no matter where I may land.

Great response!

It is interesting to note that my writing is very poor to some individuals. I am not looking to publish in a peer-reviewed journal anytime soon. This was a simple blog article that was created to spark a healthy debate.
I also don't want to publish a peer-reviewed research article, but like to consider myself an educated professional who makes every attempt to write more competently than the average elementary school kid. Your blog post is umbecoming of someone who has advanced graduate level education. The basic grammatical and usage errors were too numerous to count.
Specializes in Long Term Care, ER, and Education.
I also don't want to publish a peer-reviewed research article, but like to consider myself an educated professional who makes every attempt to write more competently than the average elementary school kid. Your blog post is umbecoming of someone who has advanced graduate level education. The basic grammatical and usage errors were too numerous to count.

I enjoy constructive criticism. Thank you for your input.

Specializes in Mental Health Nursing.

I achieved my MSN from an online school. I have received many employment offers and I have been accepted to the two post-MSN NP schools that I have applied for. I assure you that an online degree will not hinder you in your career. You will have employers who will judge you based on your education, but that is everywhere. Keep moving on because there are plenty of opportunities out there for all nurses.

Specializes in Mental Health Nursing.
personally i would never get my degree online. I've taken online classes before and with online classes, you lack the intensity, and discipline, and monitoring. it's a lot easier for people to get away with things. I've avoided getting an online degree because I fear employers would not approve. That being said, would you want your doctor to get an online degree? same thing with nurses. I would never go to a NP with an online degree. A person with an online NP degree has prescription power just like MD!

What a fallacy. And I fail to see how medical school is equivalent to a nurse getting their degree online. How is it comparable at all? I wish nurses would stop comparing their education to that of an MD just for the sake of arguing the importance of nursing.

I have read a number of responses to this thread, and I am disappointed at the seeming silent acceptance of this alleged "online learner" discrimination! Most suggest to avoid online schools in order to be recognized, and I think its a lot of BS.

There are great online programs and lousy B&M programs, and its wrong to categorize all of them the same way. Having a teacher in front of you in order to learn does not make you a better scholar or nurse- infact, for some, its not the preferred method. Since I was in high school, I wished for more independent learning, I do best that way and prefer it!

Secondly, some online nursing schools accept only experienced nurses. That was the case with me, too, was already a non-BSN RN and did not need another RN license, so I did a great online program to complete my BSN and I am proud of it!

Also, I find it too simplistic to think that teaching at the university can be all about whether your degree was online or in a B&M school, as many other things are considered. There are people with Ivy league labels who have produced nothing to their name since their degree paper! An online degree holder with a great CV can be more competitive, IMO.

For those looking to pursue university teaching, learn to "grow" your CV by show-casing your research interests, join scholarly communities, attend and participate in conferences, write professional articles, create your own networks with people of like interests, be involved in change initiatives in your workplace etc on top of your online or B&M degree. That is the stuff employers are really more interested in- someone who shows initiative and greater potential for contributing to the profession's advancement, not whether you learnt stuff from a brick classroom or from a computer screen! Its what you are capable of doing with the material you learned! If there are university employment laws that actually discriminate based only on those silly grounds, they need to be called out of their ignorance, not protected and defended, its ridiculous!

This career is lagging behind others in its scholarly prowess and cannot afford to limit potential scholars because they are online grads.

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
personally i would never get my degree online. I've taken online classes before and with online classes, you lack the intensity, and discipline, and monitoring. it's a lot easier for people to get away with things. I've avoided getting an online degree because I fear employers would not approve. That being said, would you want your doctor to get an online degree? same thing with nurses. I would never go to a NP with an online degree. A person with an online NP degree has prescription power just like MD!

I remember reading an article in Time (?) about a person who made his living writing dissertations and theses for grad students. Many of these students came from esteemed universities such as Yale and Harvard. So...yeah.

An NP who got her degree from an online university still has to do several hundred hours of clinical rotation, just like any other NP program. Why would it matter whether she watched her lectures in a lecture hall or in her living room?

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
Great response!

Quote button!

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
I enjoy constructive criticism. Thank you for your input.

You're a good sport. Even if I heartily disagree with the content of your OP. :)

an older experienced nurse told me she doesn't believe in getting degree online.

by being getting away with things with online classes, there is less proctoring for taking tests. some online classes are basically open notebook exams! if online classes were so trustworthy, then how come some schools require science classes to be taken in person?

taking classes online and in classroom setting is very different. even though content may be the same, it's a different environment. for example, in a classroom setting you have peers with you, meeting teacher in person, but in online setting you don't.

Specializes in Mental Health Nursing.
Give it time and that stigma will go away. As more and more nurses opt for online programs, I think employers will shift their thinking. Everything in this world changes. It might come to late too be of benefit to the OP, but I don't agree that other people should be discouraged from going through an online program.

This! My CNO has an online graduate degree. More and more nurses are receiving their education online. Also, there are now people coming into nursing who would have never chosen that career path before. The reason is because online schooling has opened up that possibility for those individuals; it is more convenient especially with so many responsibilities that one may have. My point is that times are changing OP.

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
an older experienced nurse told me she doesn't believe in getting degree online.
Okay....so? An older experienced nurse once told me that she thinks teens shouldn't be offered birth control. What's your point?

by being getting away with things with online classes, there is less proctoring for taking tests. some online classes are basically open notebook exams! if online classes were so trustworthy, then how come some schools require science classes to be taken in person?
Every online degree program I'm familiar with requires exams to be proctored. Can you name a school that does not? I've taken science classes from three different universities. Online. Biology. Microbiology. Chemistry. Biochemistry. All online.

taking classes online and in classroom setting is very different. even though content may be the same, it's a different environment. for example, in a classroom setting you have peers with you, meeting teacher in person, but in online setting you don't.
When I did my original nursing program, I enjoyed having my peers for socialization. I didn't need their physical presence to learn the content then, and I don't now. And even in real life, many teachers prefer you email them with questions. I don't need to be able to physically touch my professors in order to learn from them. Maybe you do...that's okay. Online learning is not for you. Not everyone learns the same way. Some people are kinetic learners, and need to be around other people they can see and hear in order to learn best. Others do not. I am in the latter.

An anecdote - I am in an online MSN program. I recently had a question about one of the assignments, so the instructor (whom I've never met in person) invited me to call her on her cellphone. At 5:30 in the morning. She spent 30 minutes on the phone with me, working through what my questions were. And then she called me back 2 hours later when she had another thought/idea about my question. I've NEVER received that level of attentiveness from any of my in-person professors.