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What are your GPA in CRNA school so far?
Same. The secret is: Nobody gives one ****.
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Watchful Care-please help!
Email the class above you and see if anyone will sell/loan you their copy.
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Mount Marty CRNA school
Hope you're using this extended break (that all the upper classes are jealous of ? ) to start studying renal! Issa doooooozy.
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Mount Marty CRNA school
Just a reminder that they send out acceptance letters in batches. And - if you get on the waiting list there is still quite a bit of hope for you. I got accepted in April with a May start and am almost halfway through the program now. Hang in there!
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Mount Marty CRNA school
Biased because I am at the Fargo site and love it there. Lots of autonomy, huge variety of cases. Site coordinator is awesome. Cons would be we won't get a lot of regional, which I am not worried about - that's what the enrichment rotations will be heavy on. Yes, I had less than five clinical questions.
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Mount Marty CRNA school
Hey, I know this is late but with interviews coming up thought I would drop my $0.02. I'm a second year student in the first semester of full-time clinicals. I really like our program. I feel extremely supported and believe our new director will lead our program well -- besides their general demeanor they are just such an advocate for the students and the profession overall. As someone else alluded to, May-August is all online with a couple of RTCs. Full time didactic starts August and goes through the next August. Strenuous doesn't begin to describe it - but we made it and the clinical element is worth all the struggle. It's so nice to be back in the hospital... That being said, clinical is also exhausting - and don't forget you still have online classes for the doctoral component. You will do basically 18 months of clinical at your home base with 5+ months of that enrichment rotations. The enrichment rotations they try to make sure you get rural and CRNA only practice. They decide where you go on enrichment based on where your home base clinical is and what that site offers. For example, I'm in Fargo and there are no sites super close to me - so she has it where we only have to do 2 enrichment sites (2.5 months at each) since we have to drive over 3 hours to get to them. For people in Sioux Falls and Omaha, they have up to 4 sites d/t their proximity to them, and what the various sites provide. I'm only 1/2 a semester into clinicals, but I feel confident that I'll be extremely well-prepared for practice afterwards. Right now I don't feel confident about independent practice, but I have 81 more weeks to get there. Rural practice is my goal and I do think I'll get there by the time I graduate. I know they've had graduates in the last couple years go directly to independent practice. As far as application, I got in my first time applying anywhere. I applied to one other school (TCU) and did not get an interview. I had a 3.5 GPA (3.2 in Chemistry/A&P). I had 5 years of experience, excellent references, and was charge RN and frequent preceptor, along with being regularly involved in 3 committees (yes it was a *** ton of commitment and work and I'd like to think it paid off). I was waitlisted d/t the grades but thankfully got accepted in the end. One of the best things about MMU is the culture they actively work to cultivate - which is that once you are in there is no more competition among the cohort. You're all in, you've worked hard, and everyone one of you deserves to be there. I love that culture and it really helps foster a sense of like "we are all in this together." The administration truly wants you to succeed. Good luck to everyone who applied this year!
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Mount Marty CRNA
Hey there! I'm an almost 2nd year at Mount Marty. The Summer semester has no tests. You will have deadlines for papers, group work, and quizzes, so you have some flexibility. You can definitely work during the Summer, although I would encourage you not to do too much! This is your last bit of freedom so use your time wisely. You are supposed to have a couple RTC (return to campus) days, but I am anticipating the school to make a decision about being entirely online this Summer, so those will likely be cancelled and you'll get an extra paper or project to make up for it. I worked 3 shifts a month which was doable. I definitely could have worked more but I prioritized spending time with my friends and family since I was moving so far away for school. I realize that may be less possible for upcoming students bc of the rona. I also worked ahead and was able to take a week off. If you really hit it hard, you can get your weeks worth of school done in 2 days. 3 if you have a big stats assignment which is generally group based. Hope this helps!
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Mount Marty CRNA
You guys will set up a facebook group the first time you meet in real life, alternatively one of you can make one and email Kristi and have her send it out to your class.
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Grading Scale
It is a lot different than nursing school. There is more material in a shorter amount of time and you have to know it more in depth. Our grading scale is A: 93-100, B: 85-92. You are only allowed to get one C the entire curriculum - class grade, not individual test grades. It is stressful. It is a serious commitment. I estimate I spend at least 60 hours a week on school, sometimes more.
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Budgets, Loans, Scholarships - Oh my.
So the thing with scholarships is, if you have time prior to school, go for it! But once you're in school... I recently received an email about a scholarship application but the amount of work it required for how much money it was for ($1000-$2500) was just...not worth it. I don't have time. My loans will be about $150k (tuition and some travel expenses). I don't care about $2500 at that point, ya know? So do your best to get after that stuff prior to school starting, bc you won't care at all afterward. If you're going to take out a personal loan, do it before you quit your job. One of my classmates found a low(ish) interest loan and took out 10k just to have in case of emergencies. Federal loans will only allow you to pull out whatever your school says tuition + cost of living is. It gets really, really tight. Especially if you have to travel for clinicals, which lots of schools have you do.
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A rant and a question re: CRNA master’s program
Seems like you are now replying just to argue. I'm not at all worried that people won't apply/go to school bc of an "early" transition. I sold my home and moved 4000 miles away to go to school. My husband still works in our home state, so we see each other only when he can fly out. I understand your situation is different than mine with multiple children and age, but there are many people in your same/similar situation who are making NA school work. They are the reason I'm not worried - they have the commitment and desire to really see this process through. In my class alone, several people moved across country. One student (42 y/o) couldn't move their family due to logistics, and so he moved by himself. He sees them over holiday breaks. It does suck. They're making it work because it will be worth it to them. My guess is you looked into NA bc you wanted the money, and realized it'd be a lot of working parts to actually get the degree. It's probably not for you. And, no, your stats don't impress me. Everyone in my class has those certs, and in less years of experience.
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I got into a CRNA program...how can I prepare myself?
Best thing I did for myself was...Not try to "get ahead" or study before I started school. I took a vacation and other than that saved money. We had to move across the country so we did that about 3 weeks before school started to get a routine, gym, etc. Highly recommend doing that if you're moving. Otherwise, if you MUST study (highly do not recommend), study the ANS. School is a grind and I would just enjoy TF out of all my free time. You won't have it again.
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Mount Marty CRNA
Last year the waitlist deadline was april 1....and I got a call on April 14 ? Hope you hear something soon!
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Mount Marty CRNA
So I had class with ---------------------- today and he said they have not sent out all of the acceptance letters yet, just fyi.
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Mount Marty CRNA
I would say about 75% of the people interviewing brought someone with them. I brought my sister! I don't believe they look down on anyone who doesn't have someone with them though - they don't automatically assume that you have no support system if you don't have anyone at the interview!