Hello, my name is Ryan. I live near the Portland area, and have been doing tons of research on nursing programs near me. I currently work full-time, Monday through Friday. I am having a hard time making a decision. I really want to get started as soon as possible with my career in the health care field, but unfortunately I have to maintain my financial stability for my wife and daughter. I am looking into the "for profit" schools, because I know their acceptance rate is much higher and it is typically a faster program. Now, before anyone goes off and tells me how bad of programs they are, let me elaborate. I know they are fairly bad programs, between the massive price differences and the inability to transfer any credits afterwards. Both of those are big cons in my opinion, but here are some reasons I'm considering it. First, they generally offer a more flexible schedule that I could potentially manage while still working. Second, as long as it's an accredited school, they issue you a diploma, and allow you to sit for your NCLEX exam, I believe getting a entry level position is the same likelihood as if you got it through a community college, only with your lack of experience in consideration. I suppose those are the big perks, and for reference the programs I've been looking at are the Sumner colleges LPN, RN, the pioneer pacific LPN, the Concorde LPN. (As far as the career colleges go). I've also done a lot of research on community college programs, and it just seems as though there are too many pre-reqs and too little acceptance rates for me to bank on it. So with this information, here are a few options I've been considering. Please let me know what you think about these schools, options, other options I haven't found, etc. The option I would like the most: Getting into a semi-flexible LPN program at one of these colleges, getting my Certification and starting an LPN job, then either considering a LPN-RN bridge program, or working full-time while going to school for pre reqs to try to get into a university/community college BSN program. Option number 2: If I can't do that, I would have to shift my working to Part-time, and with a different company(because my company doesn't offer part time work). Then I'd have to do pre reqs, and wait an extra year to try and pray I get accepted into a community college LPN program, then start searching for bridge programs. Thirdly, I could find a CNA training course, and get certified there first. Try to find a full-time CNA flexible schedule job, then pursue an LPN program, then to RN. Although the CNA job would be a pay cut, I'll do whatever I have to in order to get my career path going. i apologize I didn't go too into detail for each scenario, and again I apologize for the long read. But thank you very much for any time, ideas, and other things you give me to consider. I am grateful for any advice, and look forward to reading any responses. - Ryan