bojangles808
WKR
thank you for the insight. ironically I'm currently a special education teacher. work 9 months out of the year, weekends, nights off and we have a good union so i make decent money and my school is good but I'm always kind of wondering about what if. I got all the job security in the world though. I think I thoroughly underestimated the schooling that is needed for nursing and the nights and weekends is not appealing at all with a young family. I think it might be best to just keep my current career trajectory and look for something I can do maybe remote or on the side for side cash when I'm on break or in summer. Congrats though I'm glad it worked out for youI took close to 10 years to get an associates degree in nursing. I worked full time and this 24 hour shifts allowed to trade time, have rows of days off, etc. I was actually in what they called “special education “ classes as a youth. Basically learning disabled, my math was horrible. Still not the greatest! And I was hyperactive, took Ritalin .
This all meant I had to take “placement“ classes in college. Basically another college money grab. So I worked on getting the math out of the way first, then the English classes, then the science classes. I took one maybe 2 classes a semester. I started out work on my BSN at first, got a D in a science class and that dropped me from the program. Took the class again and got a B next time and could not get in the program after 2 attempts.
So I went into Ohio and the local small university was more than happy to take my money. I graduated in 2009 with the associate in nursing. In 2019 I started my bachelors of nursing and finished in 2021. There was no financial incentive to me rushing through the BSN program. I did it more for myself.
Maybe I’ll share the time the female professor felt me up in class because she thought I was cheating