Roseman University ABSN - Change, Growth and Learn

U.S.A. Nevada

Published

I wanted to create this topic to shed a new light to Roseman University. I am posting this coming from someone who was a skeptic to a (now) student of Roseman University. My goal is to give a perspective into the life of being a Nursing student, as well as my journey through out the nursing program of Roseman. I got accepted to program beginning of febuary 2016. Right now, our cohort are in block 5 out of 16 blocks (I will expand on this below but basically a block is one class). I am speaking entirely about the ABSN program (Henderson) and not the BSN program or the ABSN program in South Jordan.

Disclaimer: My post is entirely my opinion and is not a reflection of the alumni, my peers or the school. However, Many of what I will say are widely shared by my cohort.

Table of contents

  • Past
  • Changes
  • School system
  • Online system (Didactic)
  • Life as a student
  • Living in Henderson
  • Clinicals (to be added)
  • Guide to each block (to be added)
  • Professors guide (to be added)
  • additional comments

PAST

Like many of you, I went to Allnursing.com to get a student's perspective regarding the school prior to attending. I came across the topic:

"Roseman University ABSN (didactic online)"

Here is the link: https://allnurses.com/nevada-nursing/roseman-university-absn-666269.html

You can take the time to read through it if you have not done so, as it gives you a past history of students that have gone through the old system. To summarize, the older ABSN program had numerous problems regarding the prior Dean, terrible professors, and a broken system that prevented student from learning, passing, and graduating.

Changes

Fast forward to Feb 2016, and I can honestly say that the program mentioned before is nothing to what it is today. Although its hard to give a true reflection of the changes, I can note some that I have noticed. (I will add to this as I continue to the program)

  • The school have provided a Super remediation that enabled students a 3rd chance to pass the block/course
  • There is a NEW Dean, who have drastically changed the philosophy of the program to become more mindful on the opinion of the students.
  • Based on the Dean's orientation. Many of the professors that were terrible were removed and are replaced. Some professors from the BSN program have been moved to teach the ABSN program. the professor so far that we have had are caring, passionate and ready to help.

ABSN System

The program is not a traditional Nursing program. It is not a quarter or semester system. The program is set up in a way that you are taking one course a time called, blocks. There is a total of 16 blocks lasting 16 months. each block last between 2 weeks to 6 weeks (as far as I know). therefore, throughout the program you are focusing at one course a time. However, each block is very fast paced. To give a perspective, our pharmacology class taken at block 4 is less than 2 weeks long but encompasses the whole body system (trust me when I say this, its a lot!). Be prepared to study. Based on our experience so far, the amount of study we put in, reflects the grade we get.

Online/Didactic

The program is primarily online. Assignments, quizes, projects, and group collaborations are completed online. Anything that will need to be submitted to professors will more than likely be online. Despite this, you will have to move Here to Vegas due to labs, clinical experience, final exams and some requirements requires you to be physically in Vegas. Is it doable to just fly here on the required days? In my opinion, this is very doable but may end up being more costly than just living here. 16 months is not very long.

Living in Vegas/Henderson

Living in Henderson is not like living in the strip of Vegas. Its suburban, clean and pretty low-key. If the issue is focusing in school, you shouldnt have a problem with that here. It is generally safe here in Henderson, nothing like North Las Vegas (thankfully thats far from henderson). The city is located roughly 15-20 minutes from the strip. So party goers will definetly have a good time here. If you eat out a lot, you will run out of money fast, many restuarants are pricey, especially if you are going to the 4 and above stars in yelp. Cost of living here is cheap so if cost is an issue, I guarantee you it wont be so bad. To give an example, I am living with 2 other roomates who are in the same program as me and our total rent is 1535. my portion is $439 + utilities. There are awsome hiking spots close by: Red rock and Mt. charleston.

Things I like:

  • So much to do! So many places to eat! You will never be bored here!
  • the Strip

Things I dont like about living here:

  • The weather here is wierd. you can wake up with a windy morning, then go to lunch perfectly sunny and cool, then go to sleep with thunders and rain.
  • Theres no beaches:( (I love beaches)
  • There are some terrible drivers out here, please be careful.

Student life

How is it being a student in Roseman University living in Henderson? Well its going to go something like this. You are going to end up meeting different people from different backgrounds in your cohort. You are going to make friends almost immediately beginning with your interview and orientation. From monday to thursday, you are going to study extremely hard because you want to learn and be the best nurse you can be. You are going to depend on your classmates and they will do the same to you. They will become your family away from home. They are going to be your shoulder when things get hard. You are going to be mentally exhuasted. Then from friday to sunday you are going to relax. You may decide to go to the bars to drink with your new found friends on friday, go clubbing ( if you are into that) on saterday and relax on sunday. Then on finals, week you are going to be studying so hard that you only have 4-6 hours sleep a night. But since you worked hard along with your cohort, everyone passes the block and most of your cohort will celebrate. From time to time (once and month or couple of months) you are going to fly or drive home to visit your family. You will tell them what you have learned and how life in henderson is different from what they think it is. Then you are going to go back to henderson, ready to repeat the process again. Nursing school is difficult because of the amount of material you have to absorb. So study hard like there is no tomorrow. However, Roseman ABSN program is set up in a way that if you work hard and pass your exams, you have extra days you can relax. take those times to truly relax and unwind.

Additional comments

I am now currently on Block 5. I will be continuing to update this as I progress through the program. I will also be checking this post for questions or comments throughout the time I will be in the program so dont hesistate to ask.

Yes, and some people got pregnant during the program :)

Wow that's awesome!! How did the mom's do?

Specializes in Behavioral Health.

There were two moms that I know of in our cohort and they did great. One was in a prior cohort and came back to graduate with us. Another got pregnant, had the baby, and graduated with us successfully.

Hello all! For those who got accepted to the ABSN program what were your scores if you don't mind me asking. Just trying to see if I'll be competitive enough to be admitted...all these costs for submitting applications are adding up :(

Specializes in Behavioral Health.

Scores on the TEAS or in prerequisites? I got a 91% on the TEAS, and the admissions counselor told me you need a 78% to be competitive.

Scores on the TEAS or in prerequisites? I got a 91% on the TEAS, and the admissions counselor told me you need a 78% to be competitive.

If you don't mind, please share your secret to getting a 91?

Awesome score!!!

Specializes in Behavioral Health.

Thank you. I used the Mometrix book to study and I purchased the two practice exams. The book and the exams are worth the money!

Can anyone please shed some light on this pass/fail grading system. I already got accepted into this program. I would like to know if I should accept the offer or not. My goal is to become a psych NP. From what I read looks like graduating from this school is a career suicide.

Hell there,

If your ultimate plan is to become a psych NP look elsewhere. When you graduate from Roseman you are not given a gpa like regular schools so when you start looking into NP schools or programs some years down the line they will be obviously asking for all your previous transcripts and school information. But when they get to your Roseman transcript all they will see is that you passed. As you have probably realized by now programs usually utilize a point system to see if you qualify, but how will they calculate your overall gpa's for example with just a "pass" transcript such as Roseman. Again I'm sure you've heard that if necessary Roseman can write you a letter explaining that each course has been passed with a minimum 90% and that you can't finish their program without this minimum. But doesn't that sound a little strange? Medical programs in general are already so competitive imagine how they will be years down the line when you start looking into NP programs. It is my opinion that NP programs will much prefer another candidate without a um how do I say this...well prefer a candidate with a transcript that is just like allll the other transcripts and not suspicious. Another thing that is concerning to me is that their ABSN program has online components. How is a nurse that is suppose to provide hands on care to their patients suppose to just learn from a computer, yes I understand that their clinical and labs and tests are in person but why can't they have an actual person teaching these future nurses? Will future employers find this odd? Will a Roseman student be compatible with say a student who graduated from a state university. Also have you looked at their statistics from previous years as far how many graduates they had and how many passed the NCLEX? It is from my understanding and research that they had a year or two with suspiciously low statistics. Why is that? I just suggest to you to do your own research. Maybe start oooking into what NP programs look at as far as transcripts. Good luck! Don't look at the information that is out there for the public with foggy glasses...be vigilant... do your research...ask questions....

I looked at their most recent syllabus. I also called to confirm. Looks like from 2018-2019 they will give you a point grade GPA (4.0). Everyone will graduate with a 4.0 GPA. In your transcript they will also mention if you pass a course above 94% in the first try. They will add an H in your transcript in this case.

And in regards to the online part of the program, lectures are only online. I know several medical schools which have online lectures. Besides, a lot of NP programs are online. Even John Hopkins offers an online NP program. I also talked to them regarding this and people at Roseman told me it does not say anywhere on the degree that the lectures were given online. Employers would not even know.

If they give every graduate a 4.0 that's pretty nice and smart of them; I don't know of any other school that has all of its graduates graduate with 4.0 and therefore honors. From personal experience and from discussing the school with previous Roseman students I would make sure my important questions like maybe those regarding transcripts were asked through email to have as proof :) I'm sure you've notice their recruiter is a big fan of over the phone conversations. Things may be promised but not executed is what im saying. It sounds like you've made up your mind best of luck! :)

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