3 Reasons Why Nursing Schools are Turning Away Candidates During a Nursing Shortage

Did you know that over 56,000 qualified nursing school applicants were turned away in 2017? This number is shocking by itself but added to the fact that we are in the midst of a nursing shortage, makes it downright confusing. Learn why this is happening at nursing schools across the country. Nurses Announcements Archive

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Over 56,000 qualified nursing school applicants were turned away in 2017. You read that right - 56,000. This is happening while hospitals and clinics continue to report a nursing shortage. According to Becker's Hospital Review, some of these qualified applicants are graduating high school with a 3.5 GPA or higher. These are candidates that will likely be successful nursing students.

You may be wondering why this is happening in the middle of a nursing shortage. Let's discuss the statistics, reasons for the problem, and a few solutions.

The Statistics

Here are a few concerning statistics about the number of aspiring nurses being turned away each year by nursing programs:

  • The National League of Nurses reported that up to 45% of ADN applicants and 36% of BSN applicants were turned away in 2014
  • Cabrillo College in Aptos, California reported having hundreds on their wait list for a 60-seat nursing program
  • Many schools are saying that applicants will be on wait-lists for up to six years and some schools are discontinuing wait lists altogether

The Reasons

To fix the problem, you need to understand why thousands of students are turned down each year by nursing schools across the country.

Not Enough Instructors

Nursing faculty positions go unfilled year and year. In fact, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing reported in their Special Survey on Vacant Faculty positions that the United States has an annual national nursing faculty vacancy rate of slightly over 7%. This equates to about two teachers for every nursing program out there. And, over 90% of these vacancies require or prefer the nurse filling the position to have a doctoral degree.

The survey went on to break down the vacancies by region. The most substantial number of vacancies can be found in the Midwest, with nearly 10% of all faculty positions remaining unfilled. Just behind that region was the South (9.7%), North Atlantic (9.5%), and finally the West (9%). If you look at the issue by type of institution - 9.6% of all vacancies are found at public colleges. And, one more break down tells us that the largest number of vacancies are in Baccalaureate programs (14.6%).

Do Nurses Want to Be Instructors?

Being a nursing instructor may be of interest to many nurses until they begin doing their homework about the position and salaries. Up to 18% of all faculty positions do not have a tenure system at the institution, and another 32.6% of the jobs just don't qualify. The amount of education required for these vacant positions appears to be another barrier. Over 22% of all vacant positions required a doctoral degree.

The special report by the AACN also reports that many schools have insufficient funds to hire new faculty. And, in some schools, the administration doesn't support the additional faculty positions, even though they are turning away potential students.

Clinical Space Shortage

All programs require a significant amount of hands-on experience in a clinical setting. Finding nursing units available for clinicals can be a challenge for nursing programs. If we had enough faculty, would they receive the training they needed? The answer is probably, no.

Many schools are reporting that there are a limited number of clinical spaces for students to get this experience. And, finding preceptors in specialty areas can be another barrier. This has further compounded the need to turn away qualified nursing school applicants.

Higher Clinical Nurse Salaries

As clinical nursing salaries continue to grow, nursing faculty salaries have not been able to compete. Up to 33.9% of schools with faculty vacancies reported that noncompetitive wages were to blame for the inability to fill the position. In fact, the AACN reported in March 2016 that a masters-prepared faculty member made an average of $77,022 per year. Compare this to a masters-prepared nurse practitioner salary of $87,000, and you can easily see why these positions are difficult to fill.

The Answers

Identifying the problem is only half the bottle. Let's explore a few solutions to this nursing dilemma.

Bridge Programs

Many nurses choose nursing as a second career. Or, they start out as an LPN or ADN and move up to a master's or doctoral prepared nurse later on in their career. Professionals can make these transitions with the use of bridge programs.

These programs allow qualified candidates to continue their education when it's convenient for them. These programs have adopted an online format over the past several years, making it even easier for nurses to continue to work and advance their education. With the help of bridge programs, some of these faculty positions could be filled.

Think Outside the Box for Clinical Sites

As our healthcare environment moves away from extended hospital stays, nursing programs need to consider new locations for clinicals. Instructors are now turning to rehab centers and nursing facilities to gain exposure to patients who were once kept after surgeries and other procedures.

Nursing jobs are changing too. Looking for preceptors in-home care, hospice, and other community-based settings is crucial for the future of nursing education. And, it gives students exposure to non-hospital nursing career options.

Create a Competitive Salary Structure

Teaching is such an essential career, yet, teachers across all industries seem to have lower paying salaries. There is undoubtedly a demand for more nursing instructors, so this needs to be rectified.

If you are interested in pursuing a career as a nurse faculty member - you can increase your earning potential based on the location and type of school. You may also look at roles, such as nurse education director, to improve your salary.

What are your thoughts about nursing schools turning away qualified applicants? Have you experienced a long wait-list or other issue related to starting your nursing education? We would love to hear your thoughts and experiences.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
Smiling blue eyes. If you behave on the floor with the tone of your letter, it is clear why patients are reporting you. A bit of self reflection goes a long way. I must admit as a 20-something nurse, I had similar frustrations with what you call, "the old bats." As I look back, I realize how much I learned from the "old bats" about compassionate care, a wealth of experience, life and people knowlege, personal depth and so much more. We see what we choose to see. A bit of humility and opening those blue eyes, could amaze you on what you can learn. Good luck in your future! I mean that sincerely.

What on earth is this? Please clarify.

I'm an OB nurse of 35 years, lactation, fetal monitoring, Lamaze certified with a BSN. The state boards says I am qualified to be an OB clinical instructor without my masters based on my experience and background. The RN school I was teaching for let me go to hire a new MSN grad with zero experience to teach OB because of credentials. Schools don't want experienced teachers in the specialty areas for the students to benefit from actual stories of working in the areas. They said they have to pay a penalty because of my lack of masters. Two conflicting stories.

If there is such a shortage why are new grads not getting jobs? True it is a second career for many as it was for me but that was 22 years ago; between public schools and the gazillion private schools which popped up with rationale that being a nurse rendered one recession bullet-proof I don't see any evidence of a shortage.

I'm GenX, became a CNA at 36, and a LPN at 40. I've been called a flaky job hopper by other nurses and healthcare professionals because I am this way. I have 2.5 years experience as a LPN and am about to give notice at my third nursing job in order to start my fourth (where I hope to stay long term and have good expectation of doing so). I think every employee should be like me. The days of remaining loyal to one employer for 20, 30, or 40 years are LONG GONE because employers don't treat their employees in ways that inspire or reward such loyalty. You make my life hell, and I will BAIL on you. I have never quit a CNA or nursing job without the next one lined up. I am capable of staying with an employer that treats me relatively well. I stayed with one company for 5 years as a CNA and then LPN. Then they made it too hard to stay so I bailed. There are always nursing jobs, and good employees who know their value can always improve their situation if they want to. So do it.

I agree with this post. I stayed with the same company as a CNA for 5 years before I became an RN. Prior to that job, I worked for a multitude of different healthcare facilities in my state, many of which are no longer even in business due to treating its employees poorly or fraud. I only left my because I wanted a job in emergency services. I am now trying to get back to that company after having left because they treated the staff better than the company I am currently with. I will be searching for another job starting in January. Companies do not treat employees well; there are very few who do. At my job I have no support! There is no one to stand up for me. My benefits are not good, expensive, & are inferior to my last jobs benefits. Like you said, gone are the days at working for a company for 20+ years!

I'm tired of reading articles on this website about how there is a nursing shortage. Unless you live in a remote, rural, small town, where people have to travel distances to obtain healthcare.....there is not a shortage. I have classmates, who I graduated with almost 2 years ago now, who still have not found a job. There are so many schools of nursing now, due to for profit colleges that hospitals have a massive applicant pool. It takes forever to get hired as a new grad with no experience, especially if you do not know anyone who already works at the hospital or have no CNA experience.

Where I work, we are down 25% of nursing staff. Is it because there are no nurses available to fill the positions? No, its because people keep quitting.

I've often wondered if the nursing shortage is actually a "shortage" of facilities willing to staff appropriately.

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
I've often wondered if the nursing shortage is actually a "shortage" of facilities willing to staff appropriately.

N = 1, but no.

Specializes in Geriatrics, Home Health.
Oooooh....Yep. You right! My cohort= same. Future NPs and CRNAs all around. Not me, but hey... However, I DO want to teach someday but that's like SOOOOMEDAAAAAY.

NURSE Practitioners and Certified Registered NURSE Anesthetists aren't nurses? Are nursing instructors nurses?

Specializes in Workforce Development, Education, Advancement.
I truly appreciate the time and effort spent by anyone who posts a well put together article here at allnurses. I think it's important and valuable to consider and start discussion on the issues that affect us as professionals.

I'm sorry to need to say, though, that I think Ms. Mills misses the mark right from the start. She states her premise as follows:

"Over 56,000 qualified nursing school applicants were turned away in 2017. You read that right - 56,000. This is happening while hospitals and clinics continue to report a nursing shortage."

I would sincerely appreciate seeing evidence that the open positions in nursing as well as chronically understaffed facilities and agencies is related to not graduating enough nursing students. What I see and hear instead is a shortage of attractive opportunities for experienced nurses, and for new grads a wide gap in their expectations versus the reality of the job market and actually working as a nurse.

Hi there Katillac - Thanks so much for your comments. If you follow the links in the OP, you can see that I have used various articles as evidence that students are being turned away. I agree that graduating more students is not likely not going to solve anything. The issues related to nursing shortages and other staffing issues go far deeper than one area, like education. However, I think it is imperative that we learn more about the issues, form our own opinions, and decide how best to act to make a postiive impact for our healthcare industry and the future of nursing.

Thanks again for your thoughts. ~Melissa

Specializes in Workforce Development, Education, Advancement.
IMHO, nurses should make a push to transition from non-revenue generating staff to revenue-generators that have billable time to primary payers. Hospitals would then start looking at nurses like the assets they are and ratios and working environments would improve dramatically.

BostonFNP - I wish there was a way to "double like" this!!! I agree 100%!

Specializes in Perioperative / RN Circulator.
NURSE Practitioners and Certified Registered NURSE Anesthetists aren't nurses? Are nursing instructors nurses?

The way I read it

babychickens isn't saying that any of those aren't nurses. I think they are implying that many undergrad nursing students spend too much time planning their careers as NPs and CRNAs rather than focusing on learning to be fundamentally sound RNs first.

Specializes in neurosurgery, informatics.

There has been a nursing shortage for at least 30 years; as that was the situation in 1987 when I went to work and is still the situation now. In the southeast wages are lower than many other parts of the country; the main problem is wages. Most look at nursing and the risks/hazards in that career field and ask why would I become a nurse. They think with 4 years of education (other than nursing) there would be less risk and higher wages

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