You're going to Community College?

Nursing Students Pre-Nursing

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Ok, I'm sure this isn't a new topic. I am just quite frankly surprised at a few reactions I've received. Everyone I've told, that I'm going back to school, is overwhelmingly happy that I'm doing this. A few have surprised me though. They usually follow up with, "the U of --"? I say, "I'm going to -- Community College." First it's a nose crinkle which they immediately try to mask. Then a few have said, "community college?" Which I respond with something like, "it's an excellent way to begin nursing as an RN, then I'll continue and get my BSN at a the U of - and the hospital I work for will pay for it." Depending on the look I may make a comment like "well with tuition costs and my lack of a money tree, it's the only option, and I'm very happy to be doing this!"

I guess I'm a bit surprised. I thought that the community college stigma had lessoned a bit with the reality of tuition costs sky rocketing. I think this attitude may come from the same sort of folks who make fun at people who live in mobile homes. I guess it makes them feel superior, while they provide no alternate option for those who lack the money for what they deem appropriate. So judgemental and not helpful.

As I think about it, even if the tuition cost the same, I would go the ADN route. I don't have the money to get through four years at a university. I think the community colleges work quite well for older students. It's also a smart way to go because I can let my new employer pay my tuition to complete my BSN. The large hospitals here have on site classes that they pay for their ADNs to do to get their BSNs.

Anyway, I've gotten this attitude from my next door neighbor, a BSN psych nurse, my allergist, my aunt, and a cousin. I was just so surprised and caught off guard. My first thought with my older aunt was...if you look down on what I'm doing so much why don't you bankroll me to go all they way and get my NP at the U of --, you do have millions you are sitting on, and you can't take it with you. But I digress. :roll

Enough. How do you deal with this?

Enough. How do you deal with this?

You ignore it as best you can, knowing that you've made the right decision for yourself. If that fails, have a collection of snarky comebacks in your repertoire. ;)

I'm 38 years old and I have been a stay home mom for the last 10 years, thus making my previous job experience obsolete. Sure, I could reclimb the ladder, but my former career isn't really well-suited for family life anyway. Community college makes perfect sense to me, although like you, I've encountered friends and family that react negatively to my choice of college. For that matter, no one seems overly supportive of my decision to start a second career in nursing.

My husband and I will have four children to help through college, so taking on a huge student loan to make a career change at my age just doesn't make sense. $80 per credit hour versus $500 - 1500 per credit hour is a no-brainer in my book! After all, as new grads, we'll all be wearing the same initials on our name badges. Sure, there are more opportunities available for nurses with advanced degrees, and I would like to pursue furthering my education once I'm employed; working as a RN will make these options more feasible from a financial perspective, especially with some of the tuition assistance benefits offered by local hospitals.

A new career for $6000 and a two-year committment? That's a smart decision (if I do say so myself) and a great return on a small investment. That's how I respond to the naysayers in my midst.

You ignore it as best you can, knowing that you've made the right decision for yourself. If that fails, have a collection of snarky comebacks in your repertoire. ;)

I'm 38 years old and I have been a stay home mom for the last 10 years, thus making my previous job experience obsolete. Sure, I could reclimb the ladder, but my former career isn't really well-suited for family life anyway. Community college makes perfect sense to me, although like you, I've encountered friends and family that react negatively to my choice of college. For that matter, no one seems overly supportive of my decision to start a second career in nursing.

My husband and I will have four children to help through college, so taking on a huge student loan to make a career change at my age just doesn't make sense. $80 per credit hour versus $500 - 1500 per credit hour is a no-brainer in my book! After all, as new grads, we'll all be wearing the same initials on our name badges. Sure, there are more opportunities available for nurses with advanced degrees, and I would like to pursue furthering my education once I'm employed; working as a RN will make these options more feasible from a financial perspective, especially with some of the tuition assistance benefits offered by local hospitals.

A new career for $6000 and a two-year committment? That's a smart decision (if I do say so myself) and a great return on a small investment. That's how I respond to the naysayers in my midst.

As long as you have your husband's support who cares what others say. You go girl, become a nurse!!!!!!!:D

i am very proud to attend a community college. im gonna be a registered nurse and experience will make me a good nurse , not what school i went to. there are great techers here at vvc.

i am very proud to attend a community college. im gonna be a registered nurse and experience will make me a good nurse , not what school i went to. there are great techers here at vvc.

Great teachers are half the battle :)

I am also going to a private school, I did not want to wait for 3 years to get accepted to a community college. The first time I told my friends, some were trying to discourage me. I told them, if you can take a loan for a car, I dont see why I cannot take a loan for my education. I also told them, you get a better return in education than taking out a loan to buy a new car. The minute you leave the dealerhip, the car depreciates. So, education gives a better investment. Good luck to you all

I am also going to a private school, I did not want to wait for 3 years to get accepted to a community college. The first time I told my friends, some were trying to discourage me. I told them, if you can take a loan for a car, I dont see why I cannot take a loan for my education. I also told them, you get a better return in education than taking out a loan to buy a new car. The minute you leave the dealerhip, the car depreciates. So, education gives a better investment. Good luck to you all

You are so right, a student loan is such a better investment than any other loan.....I will have to go the student loan route eventually. Right now pay out of my own pocket. I am at CC and there is no waiting list to get into nursing program but plenty of competition :uhoh21:

You can also get a loan forgiveness after graduation if you are planning to work for a lenght amount of time with a hospital. I will be looking into doing something like that, after I graduate.

I think part of the issue may be that not a lot of people know that one can be an RN without a BSN. I didn't know that until a few years ago when my neighbor across the street told me he went to a community college to get his RN education.

I must admit, when I was in high school I thought community colleges were really places to go to get credit you didn't get in high school. Hold your slander, folks, I've changed my mind. I've taken many community college courses now and am planning on getting my ASN from a community college and get my BSN once I'm working as an RN.

I know here's a big ASN BSN debate, but really, whose business is it what degree helped you get the big RN after your name? We all have to take the same NCLEX, right? I just tell people I'm proud to be going to a community college...

Elisabeth

Specializes in Ante-Intra-Postpartum, Post Gyne.

I have never had any problems when I have told people I am attending a community college. However, one time I was talking to my cousin about my schooling and my other cousin said, "Oh, not a real college." But what bugged me is that I don't think this cousin has even graduated college, has been in and out of jail and can not work because he has an "80 year old's heart" due to a heart attack he had caused by an over dose, he is my age. I know I should not have let it bother me but I could not help but think "What nerve!"

I have never had any problems when I have told people I am attending a community college. However, one time I was talking to my cousin about my schooling and my other cousin said, "Oh, not a real college." But what bugged me is that I don't think this cousin has even graduated college, has been in and out of jail and can not work because he has an "80 year old's heart" due to a heart attack he had caused by an over dose, he is my age. I know I should not have let it bother me but I could not help but think "What nerve!"

He probably didn't even know how to spell "college" either. I'm so sorry, things like that hurt more when it comes from family members. Remember the commercial "This is your brain on drugs" with the egg sizzling in the frying pan?

Specializes in Cardiac Telemetry/PCU, SNF.

I've been the 4-year route in a previous degree and could never imagine having nursing instructors like those I experienced in the first go-round. Many of the the professors I encountered in the first go-round were pHD's or working on their doctorate, very smart, bright intelligent people, who could not for the life of them bring the subjects we studied to the level of us neophytes. After forking out huge sums of money for my 4.5 year private liberal arts college degree, I ended up loading cargo aircraft for a living. When I finish nursing school at my "lowly" community college, I'll be able to do what I love, pretty much where I want to.

I don't put much credence on people who dismiss my program, or look down because it is a 2 year vs. 4 year program. Anecdotal evidence shows me that I made the right choice. How many times have I heard, "I love working with CC students," or "let me guess, you're from the CC"? Plenty. And working in the hospital being able to observe the students from the 4-year program doing their clinicals, I'm proud and happy to have made the choice I made. No one in my program ever asked a male diabetic if his diabetes was "gestational diabetes."

Like I said, I'm proud of my program. Proud of the fact I didn't put myself further in to debt to complete it and proud of the fact that I feel like I'm getting a great education.

Don't let the haters get you down. Remeber what they say about docs..."what do you call the medical student that graduated at the bottom of his class? Doctor."

Cheers,

Tom

Specializes in NICU Level III.

Forget them. I went to a CC and transferred to a Uni for my nursing education and I'm doing better than the people w/ previous degrees from universities. It can be done and it can be done well!

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