This
paper focuses on the
nursing profession's recent practice of demanding nurses obtain a BSN
college degree as opposed to the traditional custom of completing a 4 year
hospital-base nursing certification
program. The writer of this paper discusses the subsequent productivity of registered nurses (RNs) who regularly report that the monotonous coursework required in obtaining a BSN creates learning circumstances that are costly, exasperating and unproductive. While associate and bachelor degree nursing faculty are designed to smooth the transition for
RN to BSN students, researching the differences between RN and BSN graduates have shown little success.
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