I want to be a nurse
Career Friend answer pageShort answer: RN pathways can be direct or stepwise. Users who need income may compare CNA, LPN/LVN, ADN, and BSN routes.
Here are the clearest options I can see right now for Registered Nurse.
Best options: 1. Direct ADN or BSN route Who this fits: Users who can manage prerequisites, tuition, and study time without needing a fast intermediate healthcare job. How long it usually takes: Often 2-4 years after prerequisites, depending on route and enrollment status. The catch: Potentially faster to RN, but may be harder to work during school. Basic steps: Confirm state nursing board requirements. -> Complete prerequisites. -> Apply to ADN or BSN programs. -> Complete nursing program and clinicals. -> Pass NCLEX-RN and meet state licensure requirements.
2. Stepwise CNA to LPN/LVN to RN route Who this fits: Users who need healthcare income, exposure, and confidence before committing to RN school. How long it usually takes: Can take longer overall, but may allow income and experience along the way. The catch: More steps and possible extra cost, but lower risk for users who need income or want to test healthcare first. Basic steps: Earn CNA or similar entry credential if useful locally. -> Work in healthcare while confirming fit. -> Consider LPN/LVN if it improves income and bridge options. -> Apply to LPN-to-RN, ADN, or BSN bridge routes. -> Complete NCLEX-RN and licensure requirements.
What you would actually be paying for: School and exam costs: prerequisites, tuition, fees, books, uniforms, clinical supplies, licensing and exam fees. Life costs around training: transportation to clinicals, childcare if applicable, reduced work hours. What this may cost you in time or lost income: lost income during clinical-heavy periods, program waitlist time. How reliable this cost view is: Route structure is reliable; exact state and program requirements must be verified.
Helpful proof to build while you decide: - prerequisite checklist - state board requirements - school comparison table - work schedule plan
Questions to answer before spending money: - What state do I want to practice in? - Do I need income within 6-12 months? - Can I handle clinical schedules? - Are bridge programs available near me? - What prerequisites do programs require? - What is the true cost after fees, supplies, and reduced work?
Training options I can see right now: Southern Arkansas University Main Campus (AR) - Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN): completion rate 51%, employment rate 87%, median wage $40,250; Aims Community College (CO) - Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) Certificate: completion rate 41%, employment rate 75%, median wage $44,147; Front Range Community College (CO) - Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN): completion rate 36%, employment rate 92%, median wage $44,817.
School details for Southern Arkansas University Main Campus: Public institution in AR, sector not listed.
Cost data for Southern Arkansas University Main Campus: in-state tuition $9,960, annual cost $24,951, median earnings $42,386, graduation rate 49%, admission rate 75%.
Lowest-cost places I can see in the current data: - Aims Community College (CO): in-state tuition $2,258, annual cost $16,657. Example program: Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) Certificate. - Front Range Community College (CO): in-state tuition $4,663, annual cost $21,526. Example program: Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN). - Southern Arkansas University Main Campus (AR): in-state tuition $9,960, annual cost $24,951. Example program: Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN).