Ok,here is the run down. I graduated 2 years ago. I went back to nursing school when my son was 13 months; he too is very active. I took my pre-reques in two semeters 16hrs the first and 25hrs the second. Then I went striaght into a five semester BSN program, plus I did en extra semester of externsip. It was a great experience, hard but great; and totally worth it.
-when class ends go spend time with your baby. you can study guilt free after she falls asleep.
-pizza and a rented movie is date night; you probably will be too tired to do anything else (or you can set a monthly buget for dates and blow it all at once especially if you are busy that month)
-they have great clothes on ebay and at consignment shops
-if the school food court is expensive, brown bag luches are really not that bad
-also bring your own snacks, even if you buy the exact same thing that is in the vending machine at walmart you will save about 50% or more (and you will need snacks when you have had 3 hours of sleep and they want to show you a slide show)
-Get an NCLEX book (NCLEX is the test you take to get your RN); Study the questions in it at the start. This will help you think like the instructors and like a nurse when you are taking your tests. Saunders puts out a good one that has the questions on a CD, but it is often helpful to have more than one. You will use the questions on the CD more than the book. (There are also question banks for nclex online if you want)
-Go ahead and take an NCLEX review ASAP. Hurst is the only one that is totally consistant. www.hurstreview.com Even though you won't get the content it will help you understand why the instructors are trying to get you to think like they are, and you can take it as many times as you want. So, you can still take it when you graduate. If you go ahead and sign with a hospital; you may be able to get them to pay for it.
-Find a study grop with a similar schedule. If you are up nights find the night owls, if you lie the library find out who wants to study there.
-If you know something teach it to someone else, you are much more likely to remember something that you have taught to another person.
-Don't be afriad to get involved. Teachers are more likely to listen to those who make their presence known. Wheather you are helping set up for class or are holding a class position. This can help show that you are committed and interested in nursing school.
-Be involved in most/all class discussions. It will help show that you are paying attention, and it will help you remember the content that is being taught. So, when you don't understand something; they already know you were listening.
-Don't be afriad to ask questions. Even the hardest instructor is an educator at heart. They will take the time in 99% of cases, and if they don't know or won't take the time ask another instructor.
-Accept the fact that you will probably not be a straight A student. If you are the instructors are not challenging you enough, and any good nurse should love to rise to a challenge. Be brave. be strong. Be a nurse. (Sometimes you are the only advocate a patient has.)
-Last DON'T GIVE UP
We are nurses not only by choice and calling, but through the blood sweat and tears that made us into nurses.
H. Liao RN