Published May 18, 2015
somerRN
1 Post
so i have two associate degrees: one in Medical Assisting and one in medical reibursement technology. I just recieved my third associate degree with my RN. I was told by a fellow nurse that since I already have atleast one associates prior to my RN that it should make me a BSN RN instead of an ASN? Can anyone help me with this???
Thank yoU!!
Somer
akulahawkRN, ADN, RN, EMT-P
3,523 Posts
so i have two associate degrees: one in Medical Assisting and one in medical reibursement technology. I just recieved my third associate degree with my RN. I was told by a fellow nurse that since I already have atleast one associates prior to my RN that it should make me a BSN RN instead of an ASN? Can anyone help me with this??? Thank yoU!! Somer
Actually being conferred a Bachelors Degree in Nursing is what is a BSN. It's possible that you may have a nearly equivalent education, but without the actual degree, it's not a BSN.
I have a Bachelors degree and I'm an ADN. Even with that, and as well-educated as I am, I'm not a BSN because I don't have all the coursework necessary to earn the BSN.
Multiple Associate degrees usually don't cover Upper Division GE nor any other Upper Division coursework.
TheCommuter, BSN, RN
102 Articles; 27,612 Posts
Since you've earned an associate degree in nursing, you are an associate degree RN.
You are not an RN with a BSN degree unless you earn a baccalaureate degree in nursing. Your prior non-nursing associate degrees do not equate to a BSN degree.
ADN + prior associate degrees = ADN (not BSN)