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relocating to dallas area
Wow...I'm getting jipped. The cost of living in Tyler is not that much less than (parts of) DFW. Oh well, at least they're taking a chance on me, and it's in an area I'm interested in. Going to make the best of it. :)
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relocating to dallas area
I know this thread is a little old, but I'm sure others are still searching for the same information. I got offered a job in Tyler (a couple hours outside of Dallas). It will start at $20/hr as a new grad. There is a 15% shift diff. I was wanting to move back to DFW, but it has been really hard to get interviews. I am curious what the shift diffs in the DFW area are like. I knew the base pay in Tyler was lower but am curious, with shift diff, how much lower actual pay will turn out to be.
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Possible relocation to Tyler, Texas...
I currently live in the south Tyler area. While it is pretty quick to get to the hospitals, if you will be visiting friends/family in the DFW area on a frequent basis, I'd go for Lindale. Traffic in Tyler is hellacious so the commute from Lindale could be challenging (based on time of day), but you may already be used to commuting since you lived in DFW. So maybe that wouldn't bother your DH. Personally I like the quiet time a commute affords. Anyway, I'm graduating in 3 weeks and have accepted a job at TMF. I really wanted to move back to DFW (I moved to Tyler for school), but that didn't work out. I'll probably try again in a few years.
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Is there really a nursing shortage? I am starting to think not.
As much as I would hate another year of school, I don't think a one year hands on (no stupid lecture time) clinical rotation would be a bad idea. Then we would have that magic one year of experience every hospital wants. Granted, I'd hate to pay for another two semesters of tuition, but at least I could get student loans to feed myself and my family.
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Dallas Regional Medical Center in Mesquite, TX
I really hope you do, too. And if you do choose to live in Mesquite, I was told the Poteet area is the safest.
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Dallas Regional Medical Center in Mesquite, TX
I'm from Mesquite, currently in nursing school about 1 1/2 away in Tyler. Mesquite used to be a nice city. My parents and grandparents still live there. I don't plan on moving back. My friend's father is a policeman there, and he moved his family out. He recommends Forney or further out. As for Dallas Regional, it doesn't have a good rep. There was a big whoopdedoo a few years ago where some nurses walked out or something because of unsafe pt:staff ratios. Not sure if things have improved since. I'd like to recommend Mesquite because it has a special place in my heart, but I really think you should consider other areas in DFW.
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Can you take the LVN licensing exam during RN school?
We just got a message from our dean saying that the BON will no longer allow RN students to petition to sit for the LVN exam. I was wondering if anyone on here had heard this and knew the rationale for the decision.
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transfering to ut tyler
Yay! We can be buddies. Are you in Concepts and Patho now?
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transfering to ut tyler
Just an update: I got in for spring '09 with 83.18 points (out of 100). Hope that helps someone.
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Spring 09 Hopefuls
Where are you applying? University of Texas at Tyler What is your GPA and/or points for your school of choice? GPA overall - 3.64 (UTT Core curriculum plus nursing pre-reqs only) GPA on pre-reqs - 4.0 points for school - 83.18 out of 100 When is your school's deadline? September 15 I got my acceptance letter today! :yeah:Now I just have to pass this semester (Microbiology, Concepts of Nursing, and Pathophysiology). Oh, and buy my PDA...
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has anyone attende concorde career institute in arlington
I went there. I left after the first 3 months and chose not to return. It wasn't a horrible school but in hindsight it was totally overpriced. The teachers are nice enough but they treat everyone like elementary school students and it just gets old. If I had it to do over again, I'd skip trying to do the LVN step altogether. If you are set on going that route, though, I'd check into the LVN program at a local community college. Much cheaper option.
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Love Pregnancy, Hate Medical OB
I am currently working on getting into a BSN program and my plan is to become a CNM eventually. I have a question based upon my own birthing experience. I am strep B positive (I think that's what it is called) and my OB gave me an IV for this. Do CNMs follow that as well? I always wanted a birth free of IVs, etc, and although that has yet to happen, I still dream that I will one day deliver naturally. Is this an issue that will always make my dream impossible? Or is this just an example of defensive medicine? BTW- I'm not looking for medical advice on my situation, so please don't misread my post this way. I'm actually just using my own experience as an example of a question I have regarding the basic philosophy of CNMs vs. OBs. I hope I'm making sense.
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transfering to ut tyler
Any idea what the point cut-off was for fall 07 or spring 08? I just applied for fall 08 and am curious if my points are competitive with what has gotten in recently.
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LVN/LPN schools in Dallas area
I currently attend Concorde Arlington, and I have a Sallie Mae loan, but I was offered choices. My FA counselor is very helpful and makes sure I understand everything I sign! As for the rest of the school, I have found that the front office focus is more on recruiting students than keeping them. They aren't the friendliest bunch sometimes! The education so far has been comparable with community college (I have most of my BSN prereqs through DCCCD) but the policies are outrageous! The treat you like a child, IMO. I do like that they have classes starting every 3 months with no wait, though.
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Graduated from a vocational school?
I'm attending a branch of Concorde right now. Not sure if I would pay the $20,000 given another chance, but my biggest reason was to go here was that they had classes starting every 3 months. I would have had to wait until a fall entry if I went through the (cheaper) community college. The school is run very much like a business and they treat the students like elementary school kids. Not sure if it is this way in every nursing program or not, but coming from a college setting, I just don't see it...