South university online graduate school of nursing (msn family nurse practitioner)

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Purpose of this Post:

As a licensed RN in the State of Ohio, I have decided to go back to school for my MSN. I want to become a Family Nurse Practitioner. In researching different schools, I have applied for both private, not-for-profit, and for-profit schools. In the end, I chose South University (located in Savannah, Georgia) based solely on the perception that it will accommodate my lifestyle/responsibilities.

AllNurses.com is an excellent site for nurses to network. That is why I chose this forum to discuss my educational experiences with South University. For the next 2 years or so, I will be updating weekly/biweekly on my experiences in South University's Online Graduate Nursing Program. As a graduate nursing student, I want to give other nurses a real idea of what they are signing up for with this university.

Additional Details:

Start Date: June 2nd, 2014

Program: Online Graduate Nursing Program

Track: Family Nurse Practitioner

As I was researching different graduate nursing programs I had specific criteria in mind.

1. It had to be accredited (and it is by the CCNE).

2. It had to be a flexible, online program (and it is).

3. It had to accept all licensed nurses in good standing, regardless of the amount of experience they have (and it does).

4. It had to be affordable/doable. For me, I refused to pay more than $35,000 for a program. The Family Nurse Practitioner program currently costs ($30,833).

5. It had to legitimately educate me to operate within my scope of practice, ethically and efficiently.

6. It had to be well-respected, at least insofar as future employers (or even your state board of nursing) do not laugh/roll their eyes when they hear where you graduated from.

Additional Factors To Take Into Consideration:

1. South University currently has some very bad reviews on consumeraffairs.com and onlinedegreereviews.org.

2. "For Profit" schools have a universally bad reputation as scam schools. "Buyer beware."

Disclaimer:

Before I go any further, I'd like to reinforce the fact that my opinions are my own and are not meant to reflect poorly on anyone. I will try to be as objective as possible in reviewing the school and the education I receive. No names will be mentioned, but I will discuss specific classes to give the reader as much information as possible.

Please keep in mind that admissions requirements, classes, tuition, and circumstances are relative to my situation. They will likely change over time, so I'm not entirely too sure how applicable any of this will be to others.

But for what it's worth, I'd like to give everyone an insiders look at a "For Profit," online graduate school of nursing.

Admissions Review:

Admissions Requirements


    [*=2]GPA of 3.0 or Higher
    [*=2]Unrestricted, Valid RN License in Resident State
    [*=2]Undergraduate Statistics and Nursing Research Class
    [*=2]3 Professional References (One Must Be an MSN Prepared Nurse)
    [*=2]Goal Statement
    [*=2]Transcripts from all universities you have ever attended
    [*=2]Resume or Curriculum Vitae.

Paper-Work to Be Aware of:


    [*=2]Online Application Form
    [*=2]Transcript Request Form
    [*=2]Goal Statement (Information about yourself as a professional, as long as what program you are applying for and what you hope to do with the degree. Why do you want to become a nurse practitioner? How will it impact your life?)
    [*=2]3 Professional References
    [*=2]Curriculum Vitae or Resume
    [*=2]Syllabus and Course Catalog (with web address) of both of your undergraduate Statistics and Nursing Research Class
    [*=2]Practicum/Clinical Site Form: This school wants you to identify 5 potential clinical sites for each of five clinical courses. They are not contracts and are not set in stone. They are merely there to provide incentive for RNs to begin looking independently.
    [*=2]FAFSA (Unless you are an international student.)
    [*=2]Student Loan Paperwork (If you are like me and will rely upon an unsubsidized student loan with a fixed interest rate).

Orientation to Online Classrooms:

If accepted into this program you must complete the online orientation class. It prepares you for where to find student resources (such as an online library which has most of your text-books), documents (lectures/powerpoints), student email, and technical support. It teaches you where your grades are stored and what will be expected of you in classes. To be seen as having good attendance/participation you are expected to contribute 4 times a week on 4 separate days. Contribution is defined as posting an assignment in the discussion, turning in an assignment, posting a question for the professor, and etc. If you do not make at least 2 contributions for 2 consecutive weeks, admissions will automatically boot you from the program.

Additionally, a student cannot score below 80% in any given class, without being on disqualified from the program. So, in other words, no Cs allowed.

As long as a student plays by these rules and actually puts forth effort (taking the program seriously), it seems that all will be well.

Another aspect of online education you should be aware of is that many essays and papers that will be written are going to be screened by anti-plagiarism software.

Admissions Review:

My admissions representative was outstanding and kept in touch with me every other day or via email. If she didn't have the answer to one of my questions, she would get back to me promptly. She was very patient but also helped motivate me to get things in ASAP so that I could begin in June. I finished Applying two and a half weeks before June 2nd and was around 10 days after I applied (just in time). June 2nd isn't a very popular start date. If you are applying in the Spring or Summer, keep in mind that you will face a lot more competition.

Your Admissions representative will stay in contact with you for the duration of your education.

Academic Counselor Review:

My academic adviser was very knowledgeable and helpful. I have had better luck contacting him via email than through phone, but it seems like that is the standard in an online environment. Like my Admissions rep, he has always been on time telephone appointments. He explained that his role was to register you for the correct classes and notify you asap when you are not meeting attendance/participation/grade requirements to stay in the program. He is also the middle-man between me and my professors. If for whatever reason, an instructor is not responding to me within the 24hrs time-frame they have to reply, I can call up my academic adviser. (It's 24hrs on a week-day and 48hrs on a holiday/weekend).

The program is typically one class at a time with classes ranging from 5 to 11.5 weeks.

My Academic Counselor told me that I could double up on my classes, as long as I had financial aid approve of it and the ability to succeed. After convincing him and being cleared by financial aid (I would just take out more of my loan than previously planned upon), I was rescheduled. So, I have officially doubled up the first two classes of the program, Role of the Advanced Practice Nurse and Advanced Pathophysiology.

Then I will take Advanced Theoretical Perspectives for Nursing on its own.

After that, I will double up Nursing Research Methods (an 11 week class) with Advanced Nursing Practice I and II.

Advanced health & Physical Assessment is the first course with a clinical requirement (80hrs). Every class after that (except Graduate Project in Nursing) has a clinical requirement of 180hrs.

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Tuition:

The first year of loans period I will be paying for range from 06/02/14 to 01/26/14 and will cost me approximately $16,530. I do not yet know what the rest of my classes from 04/13/15-11/30/15 will cost.

Okay that is all for now! Please post questions you have and I will do my best to answer them!!

Hello,

I see that your original post was from Jan3. Just wondering how your Advance nurse Practice 1 went. I will be starting that course in one week and I am extremely nervous. Any tips? Thanks in advance for your help.

Specializes in Case Manager/Administrator.

I know this thread is old....Was wondering how you are doing in this school I just applied for Geriatric Nurse Practitioner at South online as my decision was similar to yours. How are the classes and do you think you are learning to be a competent NP?

Is it doable to double up on APNi and APNii? I work full time - 12-16 hrs a day 3x/wk. ButI usually work 4 days a week to make OT. Since both classes run for 5 weeks, I may just have to suck it up for 5 weeks. lol But reading and writing papers slow me down so I'm just wondering if these classes are writing or theory-heavy. If they are writing-heavy then I may have to take one at a time.

Is it doable to double up on APNi and APNii? I work full time - 12-16 hrs a day 3x/wk. ButI usually work 4 days a week to make OT. Since both classes run for 5 weeks, I may just have to suck it up for 5 weeks. lol But reading and writing papers slow me down so I'm just wondering if these classes are writing or theory-heavy. If they are writing-heavy then I may have to take one at a time.

I am almost positive one is a prerequisite for the other and cannot be taken at the same time.

Specializes in GENERAL.
Expected graduation/completion date is Oct 8th! Practicum has proven to be the most difficult part so far. Even with very strong ties and networking with physicians, I am fighting for spots with a few other NP students as well as a bunch of PA students who have flooded my area.

Rod, You just encountered the best kept secret in obtaining the NP degree, the preceptor situation. You say you have had good connections in that community and now, even you, are having problems and you're near the end of the program.

Why doesn't anyone talk about this problem instead of pretending as though it doesn't exist? The quest for preceptors is ridiculous, with competition as you have mentioned with other NP schools, PA schools and medical schools all looking for the same thing.

The problem is two fold: 1. many students going into South's program and other programs do not have the "connections" you heretofore seemed to have, 2. Other schools have contractual relations (they pay them) with preceptors. This situation does not make for a level playing field, that leaves many students stranded.This situation is especially bad for male students looking for OBGYN preceptors.

So the question is: why would anyone take a chance on going to South or any school knowing that this problem could derail their educational aspirations? I can't figure this one out, can someone enlighten me on this?

I worked full time and did research and ap1. Then other half of research I had ap2. It was doable but yes the papers were a lot. I am glad it is over. Taking pharmacology now so much easier. The papers you get used to the work. You will pass!

Good luck!

Did anyone take a mini vacation say 4 days during clinical? I schedule my work days around it but do I need to log in and do discussion posts often or how were the exams? I mean can I do it earlier that week say if I am going from a thurs till a mon.

Hi every one! I was looking around for forums and found this one. I am actually enrolled in South University's AGNP program (online) and I can honestly say that their program is amazing.

I finish the program in November 16 (less than 3 months away) and so far it has been a breeze!

Right now I am preparing to study for the ANCC and AANP board certification exam. South University provides us with access to APEA Question Bank which involves 1,300 questions on patient assessment which can help us prepare for our board. This question bank is available for us until the last day of our program and I am taking advantage of this opportunity! I also plan on attending a live review course in a few months.

Is anyone else in the AGNP program?

Rod, Male Nurse, BSN

Was the clinical assignments and online work hard? Which was better taking 2 classes at a time or clinical? How was the graduate project nursing class? I am starting next week for my clinical. Excited!

Did you take each step separately? RN to BSN then go on or did you go through the RN to MSN route? Any opinions on which route is better?

Austinsmom28,

Hi. I just learned I have xyz. Can you tell me about her, please?

Thanks so much!

I have not had her. What class are you in?

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