10 Realities of Becoming a Nurse After 40 (Career Changers Guide)

8. Working as a CNA while in school — the underused move

8. Working as a CNA while in school — the underused move

One of the most underused financial and clinical strategies for career changers is certifying as a CNA in the first 8 to 12 weeks of nursing school and working part-time throughout the program. CNA certification is often stackable with early nursing school coursework, and many programs actively encourage it as a bridge.

The financial impact is real. A part-time CNA working 20 to 24 hours per week at $17 to $20 per hour earns $17,000 to $25,000 during a 15-month nursing school window. That income substantially offsets tuition and reduces borrowing. Many hospitals also offer tuition reimbursement to CNAs enrolled in RN programs on the payroll.

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The clinical impact is equally important. Working as a CNA during nursing school gives career changers hands-on patient-care exposure that translates directly into stronger clinical judgment during RN clinical rotations. Hiring managers routinely rank prior CNA experience among the top preferred qualifications for new-grad RN applicants across all age brackets.

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