The Department of Nursing offers the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program for individuals interested in becoming a registered nurse. The BSN program offers three pathways: a traditional pathway for students with a high school degree, an accelerated program for individuals who hold a baccalaureate degree, and an RN completion program for registered nurses who have an Associate's Degree in Nursing. Graduates of Concord's BSN program will be eligible to take the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX-RN) for licensure in the United States (waived for the RN-BSN Pathway).
The traditional BSN program requires that students complete 120-credit hours from: 1) the General Education Program and 2) the nursing curriculum to ensure graduates have knowledge from other fields of study and professions and can adapt and apply this knowledge to professional practice as a generalist nurse.
The 65 credit hour nursing curriculum will provide students with a background in nursing knowledge, theory, and research. Additionally, the curriculum will focus on both direct and indirect patient care, including individuals, families, groups, communities, and populations. Students will also complete a minimum of 600 clinical hours in health care settings during their junior and senior years.
Students must maintain an overall GPA of 3.0 or better to remain in good standing in the BSN program. Additionally, students must earn a "C" or better in all nursing coursework. Students who earn less than a "C" in a nursing class must repeat the course. Failure to earn at least a "C" the second time a course is repeated will result in dismissal from the BSN program.
Students who hold a baccalaureate degree (BA or BS) and have the prerequisites (BIOL 121 Foundations of Biology I(4) , CHEM 101 General Chemistry I(3) with CHEM 111 General Chemistry Laboratory I(1) , BIOL 335 Human Anatomy and Physiology I(4) , BIOL 336 Human Anatomy and Physiology II(4) , MATH 103 College Algebra(3) , and MATH 105 Elementary Statistics(3) ) will enroll in the accelerated pathway and take two years (58 hours) of nursing coursework that includes 600 clinical hours of clinical experience that will lead to the BSN. Upon successful completion of the BSN, graduates will be eligible to sit for the NCLEX-RN required for licensure.
Registered nurses seeking the BSN will complete a 30-hour, online program designed to provide licensed registered nurses a pathway to earn the baccalaureate degree. The coursework will be delivered asynchronously since these individuals will be working full-time in healthcare settings.