SF Bay Area nurses, I'd really appreciate your advice.
I'm trying to do all I can now to set myself up for the struggle of finding a job in the most competitive nursing market in the country. I could use your guidance on which BSN program to choose that would give me the best shot of landing a coveted new grad job in this area.
I am a motivated, 2nd-career future nurse currently living here in San Francisco, and am hoping to find work here when I finish my BSN. Since I'm an older, focused student with a non-nursing BA, and will definitely go back for an APN graduate program at some point, I'm leaning toward an accelerated program to get this show on the road. However, I don't want to risk blowing my employment prospects here. It would be a dream come true to land a position at an academic teaching hospital (UCSF, Stanford, etc.), but I'll take anything I can get and be grateful!
I'm also planning on getting both my EMT-B and CNA certifications this summer while I wait to start nursing school. I know this would come in handy to work part-time during a traditional BSN program, but if I go the accelerated route and don't get to work before graduation, at I'm thinking at least it'll help prepare me for nursing school and will be two more certifications on my resume.
I've been admitted to 2 of the following programs, and am waiting on the 3rd. Which would you recommend?
Oregon Health and Sciences University Accelerated BSN (OHSU ABSN)
15 months
1170 total clinical hours, including a 360-hour preceptorship
Academic teaching hospital with a national reputation
Moderately expensive option (comparable to 2 years of UC tuition)
Location: Portland
[*]California State University Northridge Accelerated BSN (CSUN ABSN)
15 months
945 total clinical hours, no preceptorship
Least expensive option
Location: greater LA area
[*]California State University East Bay BSN (CSUEB BSN)
27 months
870 total clinical hours, including a 240-hour preceptorship
A summer off for possible externships
Extra room in my schedule for working part time as a CNA or tech
Most expensive option when accounting for tuition + living expenses + 1 year less income
Location: Concord
The poll will close in 2 weeks, as I need to decide as soon as I hear from the final school. Any comments or further advice you may want to share would be much appreciated. Thanks so much for your help!
gingersnapper
69 Posts
SF Bay Area nurses, I'd really appreciate your advice.
I'm trying to do all I can now to set myself up for the struggle of finding a job in the most competitive nursing market in the country. I could use your guidance on which BSN program to choose that would give me the best shot of landing a coveted new grad job in this area.
I am a motivated, 2nd-career future nurse currently living here in San Francisco, and am hoping to find work here when I finish my BSN. Since I'm an older, focused student with a non-nursing BA, and will definitely go back for an APN graduate program at some point, I'm leaning toward an accelerated program to get this show on the road. However, I don't want to risk blowing my employment prospects here. It would be a dream come true to land a position at an academic teaching hospital (UCSF, Stanford, etc.), but I'll take anything I can get and be grateful!
I'm also planning on getting both my EMT-B and CNA certifications this summer while I wait to start nursing school. I know this would come in handy to work part-time during a traditional BSN program, but if I go the accelerated route and don't get to work before graduation, at I'm thinking at least it'll help prepare me for nursing school and will be two more certifications on my resume.
I've been admitted to 2 of the following programs, and am waiting on the 3rd. Which would you recommend?
[*]California State University Northridge Accelerated BSN (CSUN ABSN)
[*]California State University East Bay BSN (CSUEB BSN)
The poll will close in 2 weeks, as I need to decide as soon as I hear from the final school. Any comments or further advice you may want to share would be much appreciated. Thanks so much for your help!