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I am a 55 yr old with and ADN degree holding a CA RN license since 1987.
Early in my career I was attending a local University in their RN to BSN program.
I never finished my BSN degree choosing to focus on family life instead while practicing in acute Med/Surg with my ADN/RN.
Now, I have not been practicing since my mother was ill and passed away approx. 8 years ago. Though I have kept my RN lic. current in "active" status.
I recently inquired at the University where I had attended regarding the status of my transcripts.
I was told that in 2012 they realigned their curriculum and if I had not finished my BSN by then, my past course work was obsolete.
I am wondering if it is worth the expense and time to try and complete an online RN to BSN program now.
I'm not really interested in going back into acute care practice, but might like to explore alternative Nursing opportunities.
I would appreciate any thoughts / opinions about this.
Thanks for reading.
I would look for a program with both regional (e. g., Mid-Atlantic, New England, Western States) and national (CCNE, ANCC) accreditation. There are many such on-line programs and many are also run by colleges and universities that also offer a traditional classroom program. The next thing I would look for is reasonable tuition. This narrows things down quite a bit.Does anyone have advice on what aspects to look for in a part~time, online program ?I am in California with a CA lic. and not familiar, at all, with online coursework. (Except for online CEU courses) But an online program would be best for me now.
Some of them I have looked at say their programs are a mix of online and in person classes.
I am near Sonoma State University. And that is where my previous course work was completed.
But they only accept full~time students into their RN~BSN program now and I am not able to pursue this full~time.
The overwhelming majority of schools meeting both the accreditation and tuition criteria will be state-supported colleges/universities. Examples include U Texas-Arlington, SUNY-Dephi (NY), Ohio U, Ft Hays State (KS), U Wyoming - there are a lot out there. Not sure what each now charges for tuition but as of a few years ago, none of them were more than about $10k for their complete RN-BSN program. There's nothing wrong with many of the on-line programs offered through private colleges such as GWU (DC), Drexel (PA) or USC (CA) but they will be much, much more expensive. The same is true for the "For-profit" schools such as Univer of Phoenix. Keep in mind that many for-profits are not regionally accredited either, which could make going on for a masters or even simply transferring schools, difficult or impossible.
Hey there,
I am 52 with an ADN and just decided to get my BSN with ultimate goal of getting MSN in holistic abd alternative medicine. I have been a psychiatric nurse for 15 years but am looking into doing private consulting when I retire. I'm not one to sit still so that's the plan. Education is never wasted but you should decide what your focus is the field of Diabetics care is wide open as is longer term care with people living longer.
Hppy
I live in california, am 53 and attending the online RN to BSN program at University of Texas Arlington. It is going good so far. At this point the most difficult work was getting all my transcripts to them. I say never to old, and the positions that I am looking at in senior managment require a bachelors. Not necessarily a BSN though.
I must have missed the memo that 60 is the new 40! As someone in their 50s there is no way I'm even close to what I was in my forties. Aging in dog years now for sure.
So much of our society insists on perfection and excess. Acceptance of the natural aging process would be a welcome change and likely beneficial on many levels.
hppygr8ful ~
Thank you for your reply.
I participated in an RN run open clinic providing a variety of holistic care Nursing therapies. We offered Jin Shin Jyutsu, Therapeutic Touch and guided Meditation.
I saw some amazing results for our clients during that time. Including people with long term chronic pain coming off of heavy medications and returning to routine ADLs after having been bedridden for years.
I found it difficult to bring those therapies into my Med / Surg practice. For lack of administrative support and time. Though I was able to do so on a very limited level.
I did assist in teaching a couple of TT seminars for health care providers with an RN who acted as our Supervisor for a while. Unfortunately, she did not stay with that facility very long.
It was all very interesting.
Good luck to you in your endeavors.
Jules A ~
I know what you mean. I go out to do those things I've always done and find, to my surprise, they are more challenging for some unknown reason ... lol
I agree that much of our society buys into the marketed image of who we "should" be rather than finding the courage to be who are authentically are.
Speaking for myself, at 52 I'm stronger and healthier than I was at 42, or even 32. At the risk of sounding like a Geritol ad, I lost 40 pounds, maintained it, bagged cigarettes and alcohol along the way, and I exercise and (finally) get enough sleep. In my 30s and early 40s, I was mostly authentically mega-stressed ("work/life balance"? Insert canned laughter here).
TJMRN, go for it if it's really what you want to do. You qualify for Pell grants as an undergraduate (depending on what your spouse earns, if you're married). My undergrad credits transferred except for the hard science courses (had to have been within the past 5 years to qualify for MSN, so I redid those).
In 2 generations, life expectancy for women has gone from 65 to 81 years. That's a lotta Matlock!
MelissaBarthold
8 Posts
You might try an RN to MSN program. In most cases, you don't earn a BSN at all - just the MSN. You may be surprised how much credit you can get for the courses you've already had - both the ADN courses and the ones you took while working on your BSN. It may not take as long as you'd think - and that MSN can really open doors for you.