Congrats on completing the RPN exam today. What did CNO advise you in regard to next steps for RN?iblessed said:CNO gave me the go ahead to write the exam and i did the RPN exam today and will now wait for the result.
Congrats on completing the RPN exam today. What did CNO advise you in regard to next steps for RN?iblessed said:CNO gave me the go ahead to write the exam and i did the RPN exam today and will now wait for the result.
RN_0001 said:Congrats on completing the RPN exam today. What did CNO advise you in regard to next steps for RN?
iblessed said:Thank you. CNO said that i needed to complete some competences and only York offer the course that would help me and the waiting list is very long. Plus my NMC Registration is still valid so i am not a priority for these courses.
Yes the list is very, very long. I think there are only 50 spots per year or something like that. Maybe they have increased by now but definitely not near enough spots for all applicants.iblessed said:Thank you. CNO said that i needed to complete some competences and only York offer the course that would help me and the waiting list is very long. Plus my NMC Registration is still valid so i am not a priority for these courses.
Congratulations! All things said, that is a pretty good timeline I think, in comparison to the timelines of others, who usually at this point still have to do more things to show comparable education. So, good for you!brown3979 said:... No competencies and as a US RN I already took and passed the NCLEX 2 years ago. I also have 2 years of work history, but CNO did not require any further documentation regarding it.
Hmm so I called CNO to clarify I was planning to come over under NAFTA. They stated that until I have my work permit I cannot get full licensure but I can have a conditional registration with the the condition being I get it. Once I get the work permit I can submit it to them. Sometimes they can grant ability to work immediately. Sometimes it takes up to 4 weeks. Personally this all seems kinda of backwards, under NAFTA we automatically qualify with a job offer. It's shame I'm not to the point where I am ready to propose to my girlfriend yet, or this would be a lot easier lol. I'm worried the immigration people at the border won't look kindly upon the fact that I dont have the full licensure (one of the few requirements to practice) and any employers would back away from extending an offer out of uncertainty of my eligibility to work. Plus I feel like depending on who you have reviewing your information they may be more or less lenient. Plus all of the idiots who are actively trying to leave the country thanks to the election are going to make them scrutinize it even morevivon said:I got somewhat comparable too from Wichita State University in Kansas. I do believe that the syllabus helps and not so much the name recognition. I say that because they also sent tons of syllabus. I completed LPN/RN/BSN and to be quite honest, my LPN school was terrible at that time with about 60% pass rate. But my RN associate degree and BSN programs were mostly online and only attended school once a week. I requested them to send the most detailed sylllabus. I am surprised CNO did not request you to send a job description, because they have been requesting everybody else. I have 5 years experience as an RN and worked in the hospital.
Thank you for your reply. So when you had your syllabi sent to NNAS, did you have just your syllabi from your nursing education sent in to be assessed or did you have your syllabi from both your nursing education and your other degree sent in to NNAS? NNAS does say on their website that they will only look at nursing education but it seems like they must have included your first degree in the assessment as well in order to get mostly "comparable". I'm just wondering because I think half the battle for IENs is getting the right information sent in to NNAS for evaluation, so the more people know about what to send in, the better the chance their full scope of education is evaluated.brown3979 said:I actually went to Cleveland State University for my BSN, it is my 2nd degree. It was an accelerated program too (17 months) so I was worried they would look down on that. But my school provided over 500 pages of syllabi ...I will say that for my NNAS report too I was comparable for 70% of the categories, and non comparable for only something like "diversity patient populations", so I had to be pretty close on the cusp of "comparable"
Yes this will be tricky for you. It's a chicken or egg scenario. Now that you are pretty much through the verification of credentials mess, you'll be entering the immigration mess. The conditional registration sounds like it might be your only option...?brown3979 said:Hmm so I called CNO to clarify I was planning to come over under NAFTA. They stated that until I have my work permit I cannot get full licensure but I can have a conditional registration with the the condition being I get it... Plus all of the idiots who are actively trying to leave the country thanks to the election are going to make them scrutinize it even more
I only had the syllabi from my nursing education at my 2nd university. No information was provided about the prerequisites required other than the course name, grade and credit hours as they were completed at the other university. Which honestly surprised me because I feel like it would have more of an impact.RN_0001 said:Thank you for your reply. So when you had your syllabi sent to NNAS, did you have just your syllabi from your nursing education sent in to be assessed or did you have your syllabi from both your nursing education and your other degree sent in to NNAS? NNAS does say on their website that they will only look at nursing education but it seems like they must have included your first degree in the assessment as well in order to get mostly "comparable". I'm just wondering because I think half the battle for IENs is getting the right information sent in to NNAS for evaluation, so the more people know about what to send in, the better the chance their full scope of education is evaluated.
brown3979 said:So to update my timeline.
NNAS application started 4/18/2016
NNAS recieved all documents 7/12/2016
NNAS has all documts as "meets requirements" 9/11/2016
NNAS issues report: 12/15/16 (Report was "Somewhat comparable")
Apply to CNO: 12/15/16
Letter from CNO saying they are review my education: 1/5/17
Letter from CNO telling me outstanding requirements: 1/19/17
My outstanding requirement is proof of eligibility to work in Canada and the Jurisprudence (which I am taking next week). No competencies and as a US RN I already took and passed the NCLEX 2 years ago. I also have 2 years of work history, but CNO did not require any further documentation regarding it.
RN_0001 said:Yes the list is very, very long. I think there are only 50 spots per year or something like that. Maybe they have increased by now but definitely not near enough spots for all applicants.
Which competencies did CNO say you are missing? I would think that you might be missing the maternal/child piece but I wonder which competencies they said you need to go back to school for? It seems extreme.