So, I have a bs in psychology, a teaching cert., about 36+ hours of graduate studies. I love kids, I love education, I honestly have no desire to go back to teaching. I currently work as an on call sign language interpreter. I'm considering going back to school to be an RN. I'm not looking for a full time job (unless life requires it) until my children are in middle/high school, but I do want to pick up part time/pre diem type work, that's where the RN idea comes in. I'm wondering for those of you who are nurses what do you think of your profession?


K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013

Re: Nbr- career change question nursing??
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
I think you have to want to be a nurse for the right reasons, not for the pay or for the flexibile schedules. If you enter this career for the wrong reasons, you won't last a year. You'll be eaten up by frustration and emotion. Also, no institute will hire you as contingent until you have at least a year of med/surg under your belt, so you're looking at a part-time position in the least at first. If you have any questions, feel free to ask.

<p align="center"K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013

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<p align="center"@motherboy after completing those credits (in addition to my credits that will transfer) I is just an associates degree. I can then build upon if I choose. I don't want to get a BSN until I know it's where I want to be. I always thought teaching was my calling and it's not for me and that's okay I will find something else that is more fitting for me but I don't want to put myself further into debt to do so. I feel just as you said with the burn out from teaching. I have been home 3 years and still thinking about the classroom stresses me out. I do miss my students though. I want a job without homework lol! I want a job that I can leave at the end of the day and focus on my life and my children. I don't see myself being a teacher after my children are grown. I want to start a career I can build upon that I has growth and a future.
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
@spoonleg thanks! again 2 years in a crap job seems like nothing to me. I'm not looking for the best hours or the best place to work now, I'm looking to the future do the crap now so in the future I have the experience to do what I want to do.
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
If you stay away from big companies, HR is generally not the typical office job... Small company is HR is a lot of fun and offers variety in the day-to-day work. If you do a few years (even as a part timer) in smaller companies, you'll learn a lot and can move pretty easily in to various kinds of HR contracting/consulting. There is always work out there for people with good, broad knowledge of the various areas of HR.
Large company HR tends to be more specialized and less personal/employee-focused. It's more of a typical corporate job, which I why I recommend focusing on smaller companies. (I started in small companies, consulted for awhile and now work in a large, global company, so I feel like I can speak to the differences).
You wouldn't need any additional degree(s), you just need experience... You could take a course to give you HR fundamentals; this would cost a few thousand bucks at most. You could probably get your employer to pay for this after you've been there for a year or two.
Whatever you end up doing, best of luck!
Edited: Typos. I'm sure there are still some in there.
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
I'm going to not be snarky cause your last comment came off snarky....I have actually already researched this to reiterate what I already said is that I'm only going for an Associates....I will remember that college is not just leisurely fun wish I would have learned that in Undergrad or gosh grad school but hey thanks!...I think the fact that I'm giving myself 5 years to work through a community college associates degree proves that but hey thanks!
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
It shouldn't have taken you 4 years to get an associate unless you were working a few classes at a time as I'm saying, if not, you made some mistakes.
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
I have to stop responding to you now. Thanks for your input.
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
I would think that with a Science degree of any kind almost all, if not all, of the pre reqs would already be taken care of.
But back to the original post. Nursing offers sooooo many options, it would be hard to not find a place where you feel happy, even if you have to "wade through the mud" to get there. Good luck with whatever you decide.
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013
K- born 7/5/2011
G- born 6/24/2013