Nursing RN to BSN

In our RN to BSN program, you can advance your nursing career from the comfort of home.

Nursing student performing an examination

Our fully online RN to BSN degree program is designed around the needs of busy, working registered nurses.

Our program keeps you on the fast track to career advancement, with flexible schedules, individualized learning, career development advising and credit for prior coursework.

High-Demand Nursing Careers

  • Staff Nurse
  • Nurse Manager
  • Clinical Educator
  • Clinical Coordinator/Case Manager
  • Research Nurse
  • Legal Nurse Consultant

Why Earn an RN to BSN Degree at ΢Ȧ?

  • An associate degree in nursing (the pathway to registered nurse) provides foundational knowledge and skills, but many leading nursing roles require a bachelor’s degree. ΢Ȧ’s RN to BSN program offers greater earning potential, flexibility, autonomy and a broader impact on patient care.
  • All RN to BSN nursing courses are offered fully online, providing working nurses with the flexibility to balance career and education. (Students requiring general education courses may enroll in traditional in-person courses or may transfer approved credits from another institution.)
  • You’ll apply as a transfer student to receive credit for previous nursing courses, and you’ll apply your work experiences, as well (no traditional clinical rotations are required).
  • You may enroll for the Fall Semester or Spring Semester and complete the program in as little as one year.
  • Our RN to BSN curriculum focuses on: evidence-based practice, nursing leadership, healthcare finance, person-centered care, community and public health, contemporary nursing issues, innovation and quality improvement.
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We're thrilled that you're interested in ΢Ȧ and we want to make sure that nothing stands in your way of pursuing a ΢Ȧ degree. Just let us know how we can help you with your next steps.

Nursing students working on medical dummy at the Rhode Island Nursing Education Center

More Program Specifics

Understand the courses you’ll take, the curriculum requirements to meet, and the concepts you’ll gain mastery of. Get all the detailed information you’re looking for.

The ΢Ȧ Advantage

΢Ȧ’s Zvart Onanian School of Nursing is a nationally recognized leader in the field.

#15
in New England for Nursing among public universities - 2024 U.S. World News & Report
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΢Ȧ nursing graduates consistently achieve top NCLEX Pass Rates, outperforming state and national averages.

Our Nursing Faculty

Hear From a Student

Chelsey Simoni, nursing student

Chelsey (Poisson) Simoni

“΢Ȧ’s School of Nursing has some of the most dedicated, passionate and driven faculty and staff anywhere. When I say that they changed my life, they truly did.”

Designed Specifically for Working RNs

Program Details

Admission Requirements

Students apply to the RN-to-BSN program as a transfer student, using the ΢Ȧ Transfer Application. Students can enroll to begin in fall or spring and can complete the program in as little as one year.

Application Requirements for All Candidate Types

The provides the specific application requirements for all candidates.

Course Information

Program/Learning Goals

BSN Program Outcomes

  • Demonstrate clinical judgment and innovation supported by established and evolving nursing knowledge, ways of knowing, and knowledge from other disciplines.
  • Provide person-centered care across the organization/systems for patients, communities and populations, including family or important others to promote positive health outcomes.
  • Integrate population health concepts spanning public health prevention to disease management to promote the improvement of equitable population health outcomes at the local, regional, national, and global levels.
  • Demonstrate the ability to synthesize and apply current evidence that guides clinical practice and patient care decisions.
  • Demonstrate knowledge and use of established and emerging principles of safety science in care delivery.
  • Demonstrate interprofessional person-centered care that reflects core professional values including altruism, caring, ethics, roles and responsibilities, shared accountability, diversity, equity, and inclusion.
  • Apply knowledge of systems, fiscal impact, social determinants of health, health promotion, improved access, social justice, and systemic racism to improve the health of diverse populations.
  • Use information and communication technologies and informatics processes to improve the delivery of safe, high-quality, and efficient healthcare services in accordance with professional and regulatory standards.
  • Acquire a sustainable professional nursing identity that includes self-reflective practice, advocacy, accountability, a collaborative disposition, and ethical comportment that reflects nursing’s characteristics and values.
  • Demonstrate a capacity for leadership that includes a commitment to activities that foster personal health, resilience and lifelong learning.

Writing in the Discipline

In what ways is writing important to your profession?

Writing is essential to communicating as a nurse. Professional nurses write as care givers, advocates, teachers, and researchers. Nurses write to provide high quality safe care to patients and communities, to propose improvements to health care delivery and to promote changes in health care policy.

Which courses are designated as satisfying the Writing in the Discipline (WID) requirement by your department? Why these courses?

NURS 208W: Scholarly Inquiry and Practice in Nursing is the foundational WID course for the RN to BSN Program. In this course, students are introduced to the conventions of writing in nursing, APA formatting, and the role of evidence-based nursing practice. All nursing courses that follow NURS 208W continue to develop students’ writing skills over time.

What forms or genres of writing will students learn and practice in your department’s WID courses? Why these genres?

The forms of writing taught in the nursing program are clinical writing (or workplace writing), academic writing and reflective writing. Through various types of clinical writing, including care plans, charting and discharge summaries, nurses describe and document patient care. Clinical writing may also include promotional materials and policies developed to serve groups and communities. Professional nurses use academic writing to disseminate new knowledge in the discipline and promote evidence-based practice. Reflective writing, such as journaling and informal responses, serve as a way to learn (“writing to learn”) and as a means to self-understanding and professional growth.

What kinds of teaching practices will students encounter in your department’s WID courses?

Some of the teaching practices students will encounter will be journaling, low-stakes and high-stakes writing assignments, peer reviews, scaffolded assignments and opportunities for revisions and incorporating feedback into later drafts.

When they’ve satisfied your department’s WID requirement, what should students know and be able to do with writing?

Upon completion of the Bachelor of Science in nursing, graduates will be able to: 

  • effectively communicate in writing in the various professional nursing roles
  • accurately and precisely document professional practice in clinical settings
  • prepare thoughtful and effective research papers in the discipline of nursing
  • prepare oral and written presentations individually and collaboratively to achieve a specific purpose
  • engage in reflective writing for personal professional development​​​​​​
΢Ȧ entrance

Take the Next Step!

Zvart Onanian School of Nursing

From the Bachelor of Science in Nursing to the Doctor of Nursing Practice, the ΢Ȧ Zvart Onanian School of Nursing educates and prepares graduates for the challenges of today’s complex health care settings.

Linda Mendonca

Linda Mendonca

Associate Professor