Published Jun 7, 2011
Chuvaaaaa
22 Posts
I cannot call myself a new grad anymore because I graduated last April 2010. A year has passed an I still don't have a RN job. I passed my NCLEX, took up BLS, ACLS, PALS, IV Therapy, ECG & Pharmacology certs. so I can be more marketable, but I'm still begging for a job. I live in NJ, and have licenses have been endorse to another 2 states, CA & TX. I've applied for about 250 positions...you name it from hospitals, LTC, Rehab, Clinics, Assisted Living, Agencies, Hospice. Got 6 interviews, 3 from hospitals and 3 from LTC, been to Nursing Career Fair, and no positive reply from those. I'm loosing hope. I just keep on praying.
Any thoughts? Am I the only one on this boat? :confused::confused::confused::crying2::crying2:
Jenni811, RN
1,032 Posts
i don't know what to say. I got one right away after i graduated last yr. I don't know what the job market is like out on the east coast, but it's really picked up here (Midwest). Still having some people struggle but not as bad as it used to be.
Have you talked with the managers you've interviewed with?? Maybe they could give you some feedback as to why you didnt.
Catch22Personified
260 Posts
At this point its who you know not what you have.
Hawkens
54 Posts
Try volunteering at a hospital or facility near you so that they recognize your name and face when a opening is available also it will be something to put on the resume. Have you looked into summer camps or daycares volunteer at blood drives. Think outside the box. Good luck.
mdgradRN
20 Posts
Are you interested in pysch? Did you try state Psych facilities? Try to volunteer as RN in hospital, some do allow...
MBrnbsnmha/ed
35 Posts
Would you be able to relocate to another state or area in NJ?
applewhitern, BSN, RN
1,871 Posts
Sounds like you are very qualified, with all your certs. I wonder if something is showing up in your background check, perhaps erroneously?
EMcGrady
Sorry for your stress. It's taken me a long time to find real possibilities too. I've heard Texas has new grad positions?? I know that Oregon State Hospital, a psych hospital, in Salem is hiring new grads a lot. They're opening a whole new facility in a month. Good luck and keep hopeful. I'll keep you in my thoughts.
iPink, BSN, RN
1,414 Posts
I'm not sure relocating is an option for you, but maybe look into that. I too am in Jersey and one professor let us have it honestly that the Tri-state area is tough for new grads. I live alone and so ready to leave when I graduate. I've been heavily looking at TX for next year.
But, it is true it's about who you know. My clinical instructor is looking at us (her clinical students) for future employment at her hospital.
My academic advisor in nursing school described it as this...
Everyone applying for the job has the same qualifications. You all have your nursing degree, you've all passed your boards, you all have or will have the same certifications (including what you have). So don't bank on those being your "selling points" because they are not selling points at all. You need to sell yourself to them, so you need to come up with something that makes YOU unique to everyone else. Ask yourself "What do i have that the others do not have?" INclude volunteer hours in this.....they LOVE volunteer hours. And if you don't have volunteer hours, pick something different.
I volunteered with special olympics, doesn't get much better than that! I also volunteered at a flu clinic. There are more...but you get the picture.
So do things that make you stand out other than certifications, because other people applying for the job have those too or WILL have those provided by the hospital. Those are not your selling points.
wishinguponastarLPN
217 Posts
Maybe its your resume? Sometimes just tweaking the format makes a huge difference! If it is too "wordy" nursing recruiters hate that. They skim a resume for about 5 seconds before deciding if they will call that person for an interview. Keep it short and bullet points. An awesome resource that my school gave us was www.nurseresumesecrets.com. You can get some really nice resume tips, example templates and interview tips for free and is just for nursing! :up:Good Luck!
DSkelton711
312 Posts
Lot of good advice here! I wish everyone good luck! But when I see younger nurses with all the bells and whistles not getting jobs I think I have to face the facts at last: I am 50 with an ADN trying to rejoin the workforce. It ain't gonna happen. I have been a nurse for almost 30 years (off/on). Been trying for 2 years to find a job. It is a long way to retirement and have to figure out how to start completely over. It is very daunting. Wish things were better for everybody.