Associate in Nursing

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Associate of Science in Nursing Degree

Grace Community Institute is committed to academic excellence through the provision of an innovative and engaging learning environment, cultivating a community of care, and building strong partnerships within the local community with the goal of facilitating positive change and the promotion of economic mobility to enable students to prosper via education.

You can trust the nursing education you receive at the Grace Community Institute where we have staff and professors that have over 30 years of experience.

Grace Community Institute's College of Nursing offers nursing programs that give you sought-after skills that you can take anywhere. Our Associate in Science degree program trains you to become a Registered Nurse. 

Our simulation laboratory is equipped with high fidelity manikins of various ages such as adult, toddler and an infant. The high fidelity manikins are equipped with physiological appropriate responses to treatment interventions, including airway and oxygenation management, fluid administration, defibrillation and the administration of drugs.

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Why nursing is the right fit for me?


  1. You Want Growth and Variety in the Job Market

Career stability is really important in today’s job market and going into nursing guarantees you that. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) predicts a 12% growth in nursing careers in the United States by the year 2028, which is much higher than average. What does this statistic mean for nurses? A surplus of jobs and a natural agility in the job market. There’s nothing quite as anxiety-inducing as dealing with job scarcity in your hunt for work; as a nurse you’ll never have to face that. A career in nursing also puts you right on the cutting edge of innovative medicine and growing long-term care for chronic illnesses, which means you’re in an environment that’s constantly changing and offering you new opportunities to learn and increase your market value as a nurse.

  1. You Want to Earn a Decent Salary

With the job growth mentioned above comes competitive salaries, which, as a nurse, comes to your advantage. A registered nurse salary is $77,000 a year on average. If you become an advanced practice nurse—a nurse with post-graduate education and training in nursing—you stand to earn an average salary of $90,000, plus sign-on bonuses due to profession shortages (which, as stated, are projected to grow). Many senior-level nurses make an average salary of well over $100,000 and have the sought-after luxury of terrific job security, which can’t be undervalued in this day and age. Depending on which nursing field you pursue, you can make even more, according to a recent article featured on nurse.org.

  1. You Want Lots of Job Options with Real Impact

If you like to have options in your profession, consider nursing. Nursing professionals can work in a variety of settings, such as hospitals, homes, hospices, clinics, and doctor’s offices—even the military, schools, or businesses. Nurses in management or a particular specialization work with diverse teams and populations in their journey to advance healthcare. Are you the type who wants to do more with their profession than simply earn money? If you want your career to be marked by impact, then nursing is a great route for you. Nursing is one of the few jobs where you can be an integral piece in offering immediate and life-changing interventions directly to people and communities every day.

  1. You Want to Learn (and Keep Learning)

Working in nursing means always finding yourself in new situations with new people and with new knowledge and information. Every single day you work as a nurse, you’ll be exposed to opportunities to learn. Even the normal schedule of a nurse brings challenges and constant change. On top of that, the demands of the profession itself include constant education and credit requirements to maintain licensure or gain additional certification as the science of care becomes more advanced. Learn more about advanced nursing education options.

  1. You Want to Make a Difference in a Niche

Nursing can be as broad or as specific as you like. You can cultivate knowledge in general medicine or you can specialize in psychology, obstetrics, and so much more. Whether you feel called to a specialized, technical niche or you feel more at home in family practice, there are countless opportunities for you as a nurse. You can seek a profession in telehealth, outpatient, bedside, and legal settings. Nurses play a life-changing role in hundreds upon hundreds of settings. Rest assured, you can make a meaningful and significant impact in any one of these settings as a professional nurse.

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What can you do with a nursing degree?

After completion of the ASN program, you can continue your journey by earning a BSN degree. Depending on your interests, you can pursue a career with a broad application of nursing or you can seek a specialty area like community nursing, burn unit nursing, or epidemics research nursing. You can also specify what type of people you’d prefer to work with (children, older adults, or researchers). The same goes for setting; if you don’t see yourself working in a hospital, you could work at an elderly care home, in a research lab, on the road as a travel nurse, or even on a cruise ship. That’s one of the beauties of working as a nurse: the variety across the board.

What are careers in nursing?

There are many career paths you can pursue as a nurse. Here are some of the popular nursing specialities you can pursue:

  • Registered Nurse (RN)
  • Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS)
  • Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN)
  • Cardiac Nurse
  • ER Nurse
  • Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA)
  • Critical Care Nurse
  • Geriatric Nursing
  • Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP)
  • Mental Health Nurse
  • Perioperative Nurse (Surgical/OR Nurse)
  • Registered Nurse (RN)
  • Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS)
  • Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN)
  • Cardiac Nurse
  • ER Nurse
  • Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA)
  • Critical Care Nurse
  • Geriatric Nursing
  • Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP)
  • Mental Health Nurse
  • Perioperative Nurse (Surgical/OR Nurse)

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