The RN to BSN option is designed for registered nurses (RNs) whose highest academic credential is an Associate of Science in Nursing (ASN) degree or a nursing diploma. Students must provide evidence of current nurse (RN) licensure in any state where the student is practicing for the purpose of completing clinical course requirements. Because the program is flexible—students can enter the program in the fall, spring, or summer, taking distance accessible courses—it is perfect for those who want to continue their nursing education while maintaining their current work and/or family responsibilities.
As a BSN student, you’ll learn current trends in health care and develop the knowledge and skills necessary to adapt to these trends through changing practice. With a comprehensive academic foundation in the sciences and humanities, you’ll be well-prepared to meet the current and future health needs of society.
Your studies will focus on the following areas:
Health promotion
Disease prevention
Health restoration
Health maintenance
Management of individuals/families coping with acute and chronic illness
Because this program builds on the courses you have already completed, you’ll also receive credit for many of the general education courses completed as part of your ASN or diploma program.
Advantages of the RN to BSN option
As part of the flexibility of the program, courses are available online, so students are not required to travel to campus for class. In some cases, the general education courses may be completed through Indiana University’s distance education programs or at another college/university in your area, with credits transferred to the School of Nursing's RN to BSN option.
The program is based upon a cohort model which means that you are part of a group of RNs who will progress through the program together. This allows us to offer course work systematically in order to streamline your academic progress.
A portfolio option is available to students who believe they meet the outcomes of specific courses through prior learning and/or professional nursing experience. Through a portfolio review process, you may be able to meet course requirements by documenting evidence of your nursing skills and experience.
Following successful completion of the two nursing transition courses, RNs receive advanced standing in the BSN program along with special credit for 35 credit hours of nursing courses. To earn the BSN, your official transcript must reflect fulfillment of all requirements, which includes 35 hours of special credit.
The BSN program prepares students to meet the current and future health needs of society through a comprehensive academic foundation in the sciences and humanities. A minimum of four years of full-time study is necessary, with course work emphasizing health promotion, disease prevention, health restoration, and maintenance. For students who wish to combine general education with professional course work, or who plan to go on to graduate studies, this is the program of choice.
The BSN offers a creative curriculum to prepare students for careers as professional nurses who understand society’s current and future health needs. The curriculum reflects the current trends in health care, focusing on wellness/illness concepts and the delivery of care in both hospital and community-based settings.
The BSN curriculum consists of two components:
53-55 credit hours of general education course work organized in “clusters”
70-72 credit hours of nursing courses that stress critical thinking, communication, and collaboration skills
The curriculum also provides a foundation for graduate study and leadership positions, as graduates will possess a broad knowledge of the humanities, biological and social sciences, and nursing.
An honors option is also available for students who demonstrate exceptional academic promise and commitment.
A portfolio option is available to students who believe they meet the outcomes of specific courses through prior learning and/or professional nursing experience. Through a portfolio review process, you may be able to meet course requirements by documenting evidence of your nursing skills and experience.
Since our master’s degree program began in 1945, we have been a leader, developer, and innovator in graduate nursing education. Thanks to our comprehensive and demanding curriculum, our Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) program continually ranks among the nation’s elite programs. We offer a variety of tracks that prepare nurses for virtually every area of health care as well as post-master's options and graduate certificates. Our faculty is nationally recognized for their contributions to research, teaching, and practice. Additionally, our affiliations with outstanding health care institutions guarantee that we remain on the forefront of health care trends and allow us to expose students to the latest in health care research, technology, and practice.
Nursing is a scientifically- and theoretically-based service profession. By embracing the contextual nature of practice through integration of multiple ways of knowing including critical thinking, research, reflection, and intuition, MSN graduates become expert nurses who provide holistic, ethical, evidence-based care within an interdisciplinary environment. Through the educational process, students become visionary leaders who advance the profession of nursing and influence the future of health care.
For more information about our master's curriculum, please review the specific track of interest on the right.
Careers
As the health care industry continues to evolve and our population grows older, the demand for advanced practice nurses is increasing dramatically. The MSN degree prepares graduates for leadership roles in advanced nursing, with opportunities for practice as:
Clinical nurse specialists (CNSs)
Nurse practitioners (NPs)
Nursing administrators
Nurse educators
As nurse leaders, graduates of the MSN program are prepared to provide and improve care to patients, families, and/or communities and to lead educational and complex health care systems.
The RN to MSN option creates educational and career mobility for registered nurses (RNs) whose highest academic credential is an Associate of Science in Nursing (ASN) degree or a nursing diploma from an accredited program.
As a student in the RN to MSN option, you will apply to one of our eight MSN specialty tracks at the time you apply for admission. You will complete undergraduate general education requirements and transition courses, and then you will begin studies in the MSN track to which you have been admitted. Upon successful completion of the required courses, you will graduate with an MSN degree. You will not receive a BSN degree in the process.
RNs who are busy with careers or family responsibilities can still earn an MSN degree thanks to our flexible program. Students may complete the program on a part- or full-time basis. Our online courses are expanding and become more popular every semester, enabling students to earn credits from home.
Specialty courses for most MSN tracks are taught on the same day each semester, making it easier to organize busy schedules. In addition, nursing administration is offered in a weekend format, with students completing the courses in the major one weekend per month for ten months.
As the health care industry continues to evolve and our population grows older, the demand for advanced practice nurses is increasing dramatically. The MSN degree prepares graduates for leadership roles in advanced nursing, with opportunities for practice as:
Clinical nurse specialists (CNSs)
Nurse practitioners (NPs)
Nursing administrators
Community health nurses
Our second degree BSN track is specially designed for anyone who has earned a bachelor’s degree in a non-nursing field but wants to pursue a nursing career. As a 20 month, full-time program, the second degree BSN option prepares students to meet the current and future health needs of society through a solid academic foundation in the practice, science, and technology of nursing. The 20 month program begins once students have completed all needed general education courses and have been admitted to the second degree program.
Many general education credit hours (such as the humanities, communications, and social sciences) from the first bachelor’s degree will be transferred and applied toward the BSN degree, making the 20 month completion possible. The 20 month time frame includes only nursing courses.
The second degree BSN track is an accelerated program and requires a dedicated time commitment in order to graduate in the 20-month time frame. It is absolutely crucial to understand this time commitment in order to progress and graduate as expected, as there is little opportunity to adjust for absences or tardiness in this program.
The curriculum emphasizes the following areas:
Health promotion
Disease prevention
Maximum levels of wellness
Health in adults, children, and families
Students work with nursing faculty and expert nurse preceptors as part of the clinical and practical experiences of the program, gaining exposure to hospital and/or community-based nursing with a focus on such areas as:
Critical care
Acute care
Neonatal intensive care
Pediatric intensive care
Operating and emergency room
Upon completion of the second degree BSN option, you’ll be eligible to apply for a registered nurse (RN) license so you can enter the nursing workforce. You’ll also be prepared to pursue graduate education, if your ultimate career goal is an advanced nursing position such as a clinical nurse specialist, nurse practitioner, or nursing administrator.
The Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) is a post-masters 37-credit hour practice-focused professional doctorate. The DNP is designed for nurses involved in any advanced practice role including but not limited to : clinical nurse specialist, nurse practitioner, nurse midwife, nurse anesthetist, public health practitioner, nurse executive, nurse informatician, nurse educator, and health policy analyst. Graduates of the program are prepared to assume leadership positions in nursing and health care, both at system or organization levels and at the direct patient care level. Graduates of the program will contribute to quality improvement and patient safety through systems thinking; reflective practice; informatics; translation science and evidence-based clinical practice.
Thirty-seven credit hours (post-masters MSN) are required to complete the program. Graduates of the program may seek careers in primary health care, complex health care systems, nursing informatics, patient safety and in clinical nursing education. This program provides distance accessibility with some limited on-campus presence.
The program is designed to meet the needs of advanced practice nurses who hold a master’s degree in nursing and certification in their specialty area. The DNP is designed to produce clinical practice experts with the skills and competencies required to lead in complex health care settings. The program may be completed on a full-time or part-time basis.
Graduates of the DNP program are expected to:
-Use relationship-centered nursing leadership to improve health care and the health status and outcomes of individuals.
-Engage with communities of practice to frame problems, design and implement evidence-based interventions and evaluate outcomes.
-Integrate the needs of diverse societies in the design, delivery and evaluation of health services in complex systems.
-Transform clinical practice through reflection, action inquiry, strategic resource management, information technology and/or knowledge-based resources.
-Translate knowledge for application to the delivery of advanced nursing practice.
-Implement changes based on evaluation of health systems, health policy and nursing science in response to social, political, economic and ethical issues.
-Evaluate the impact of change on complex health systems including individuals and populations.
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