Bachelor of Science in Nursing Traditional Pre-Licensure

Concordia University, St. Paul

USA,Minnesota

 0 Shortlist

48 Months

Duration

CAD 24,000/year

Tuition Fee

CAD 0 FREE

Application Fee

Apply Date

USA, Minnesota

Type: University

Location Type: Urban

Founded: 1893

Total Students: 5,819 +

Campus Detail

Main Campus Address

1282 Concordia Ave, St Paul, MN 55104, United States

Bachelor of Science in Nursing Traditional Pre-Licensure

Program Overview

A Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) from Concordia University sets students up for rewarding careers in nursing. This pre-licensure program prepares graduates for the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX-RN), required to practice as a Registered Nurse (RN).

  • Program Design: The St. Paul-based on-campus program is offered to be completed over 5 semesters during the fall and spring semesters (no classes during summer semesters). The nursing program starts new nursing cohorts each fall and spring semester.
  • Clinical Learning: Students begin clinical learning experiences in their first semester of the nursing program. Clinical learning experiences occur in a variety of healthcare and community-based settings throughout the Twin Cities metropolitan region and through various modalities, including simulation.

BSN students build on a wide range of study in sciences, including human anatomy, physiology, biology, chemistry. They’ll study the fundamentals of professional nursing, behavioral health, pathophysiology, and pharmacology. In addition, students gain deep academic study in nursing care for adults, childbearing & childrearing family care, as well as aging and palliative care.

The program builds the foundation for CSP students to serve as generalists in a wide range of care settings. Dynamic learning opportunities combine in-person classroom learning with hands-on experience in CSP’s high-fidelity simulation labs and supervised clinical practice in actual healthcare facilities.

With a BSN from CSP, graduates emerge with the skills needed to help them pass licensure and enter the nursing profession, which then opens additional opportunities for further specialization in various aspects of health care.