I'm only a freshman in a nursing program heading to a BSN, but I want to start early. My draw into nursing stems from my desire to help people, love for a fast paced and challenging environment and job security. My draw into CRNA comes from personal stories I've read, and just a strong sense of 'that's what I want'. I have a few more years of school, obviously, but I want to be on the track to get into a good grad school. The only way I know how to do this is to start early. My nursing program requires these classes: (Along with our nursing courses, including 2 research classes teamed with clinical. && I'm taking a statistics course as well.) A full year of Human Anatomy and Physiology. Pathophysiology Microbiology Allied Health Chem General Psychology Fundamentals of Nutrition My question is about the Allied Health Chemistry class I have to take. The class is a mix of organic chem, bio chem, and gen chem. However, a problem I'm running across is that a lot of grad schools require organic chem, bio chem and physics. Do you believe that my health chem class will fill the bio chem and organic chem requirements? As for the physics, I'm concerned. We only have a physics I and a physics II course in my school, and it's 2 semesters for 1 class. That's hard to fit into my schedule outside of my major. I have a million more questions, but I'll keep researching.