Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Higher education

Talk to other parents whose children are preparing for university on our Higher Education forum.

Have i got no chance?

41 replies

DownstairsMixUp · 04/12/2015 12:36

Hello bit difficult to explain but wanted to know some other output here!

I worked as a health care assistant and gained an NVQ Level 2 in health and social care, at the time (this was 2008) I had to do some extra modules to gain the credits to go to university to do adult nursing which did get me in and i completed 2 years of nursing. Unfortuntely I fell pregnant, took maternity leave then my marriage broke down and i had no support to finish.

Anyway fast fast forward from 2011 and that's where my heart lays really. I've tried to get on in other jobs but it's not what I want. Now i have a different life, plenty of support and a great husband but i've heard things have changed now about entering uni.

Anyway i submitted my ucas application, i've tried to mention everything basically, the fact i did two years nursing already,passed all exams, have had a total of three years working on wards plus the uni experience of learning and i have the nvq level 2 health and social care wih extra credits plus GCSE english and maths at B and gcse science and history at c.

What are my chances? Has anyone had any experience of going to uni a mature student with not the "typical" qualifications? I don't have a levels just my own experience and qualifications. I never struggled as a student nurse academically (all exams passed well above 60%) I really want to go back to it! How long do you think it would take to hear? Thanks for any advice!

OP posts:
Mindgone · 04/12/2015 23:10

I have no idea of the answers to your questions, but I'm full of admiration for you! You're obviously very focussed and determined, and know exactly what's required. I'm sure you'd make an excellent nurse, and I really hope the admissions panels see that, and grab you fast! Very best of luck Xmas Smile

DownstairsMixUp · 05/12/2015 09:42

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

mudandmayhem01 · 05/12/2015 09:53

You sound like an excellent candidate, my dh is a nurse who has supervised lots of student nurses, I think he delighted if some one with your level of experience appeared on placement. I imagine your credits from your previous couse would make up for lack of A levels. I would try and speak to a careers adviser or some at the nursing course you last attended to make sure previous learning is corrected recognised.

StrawberryTeaLeaf · 05/12/2015 09:59

I don't know about Nursing but that sounds hopeful to me;

two years nursing already,passed all exams, have had a total of three years working on wards plus the uni experience of learning and i have the nvq level 2 health and social care wih extra credits plus GCSE english and maths at B and gcse science and history at c

They want people who will be good nurses, understand the profession they are getting into and can handle the academic requirements. I think you've demonstrated you meet all of that, judging by what you've said there. From what I've heard from friends in nursing, it's normally ward experience that is lacking, isn't it?

Good luck Smile

DownstairsMixUp · 05/12/2015 10:14

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

sharoncarol43 · 05/12/2015 10:17

You have very good chances. Many nursing candidates fail on the literacy and numeracy tests, or the interview.

How are you at those?

You should download all information you can about the tests and interview, and prepare thoroughly

DownstairsMixUp · 05/12/2015 10:58

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

hefzi · 10/12/2015 14:38

I'm not in nursing, but we get a fair proportion of mature applicants with "non-traditional qualifications" (ie on paper, they don't have the various qualifications we expect from school leavers). For us, the important thing is that they have their Bs (at least) for GCSE Maths and English (if they are young enough to be going into the workplace on graduation, as not having these will limit their graduate job options) and have a good narrative about what they've been doing - essentially, a PS that explains everything. Passion and experience is key for us - and I would have thought more so in nursing (ours isn't a vocational or practical subject, but we need to know people understand what it is - and what it's not).

If there is not enough information to make up our minds from the application, we'll ask these applicants to do an additional task - perhaps set them an essay title - and possibly come in for an interview. Mature students tend to do really well at their studies, too.

Good Luck!

DownstairsMixUp · 10/12/2015 14:43

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

Horsemad · 10/12/2015 20:05

I have no experience of this, but want to say Good Luck!

hefzi · 20/12/2015 18:23

Have you had any news yet, Downstairs? Access is a good back up, but my fingers are crossed you'll get in straight away!

EYDavis · 27/12/2015 17:58

I presume this will rest on how imaginative the course selectors are. They could either see you dropping out of a previous nursing degree as a black mark or (combined with your reasons for re-applying) as putting you a step ahead of the other candidates. We need lots more good nurses and so I hope they make the right decision.

Notsobadpharma · 28/12/2015 18:43

I applied to Aberdeen Uni at the beginning of the year. I had some 30 year old Highers, a couple of modules from the OU that were more recent and an HND in Psychological Studies that I squeezed for all it was worth about the Biological Psychology and Human Biology in my personal statement.
Basically I didn't think I had a hope in hell.

Just finished my first term, although I do think I made a bit of a train wreck of my chemistry exam.

Best of luck!

breward · 28/12/2015 20:54

My best friend's DD had A levels ABBB (6A and 3As at GCSE) and was rejected from every nursing course when applying. She did not have a science A level, only psychology. However, in the July just after her last A level Anglia Ruskin (who had rejected her) released more places and she was accepted onto a course.

She was the youngest on her course and said one of only a few with A levels. Most on her course were mature students with years of experience as care assistants, or other nursing experience. Their experience certainly shone through when on placement as they knew their stents from their stoma bags whereas it was a very steep learning curve for friend's DD.

Good Luck. Nursing courses are looking for all sorts.
(Friend's DD has just graduated and is working as a community nurse now)

chocolatespiders · 28/12/2015 23:15

Can you not pick up your course where you left off rather than starting from the beginning.
It may also be worth looking to see if you can get a secondment from your work. We recently got an email (NHS) promoting them at work.

DownstairsMixUp · 03/03/2016 18:12

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

lougle · 03/03/2016 20:01

Oh dear. That doesn't sound right, given your experience. Could you try to get some feedback on where your personal statement let you down?

There's been a huge shift towards values based education since the Francis Report. Do you think you covered that element and showed an understanding of the importance of integrity, dignity, advocacy, etc? Or did you focus on nursing skills?

Headofthehive55 · 03/03/2016 20:17

I think it's just very hard to get into. Try again!
Try another uni?
You haven't just got a NVQ, you have two years higher education. I wonder if you could get that acredited? If you write to you old uni they will send you a transcript of your achievements. It will be a higher level than A level but like the first year of a degree. you can use that for the ou in case you want to complete a degree. you will perhaps be one of the most qualified academically not least!

DownstairsMixUp · 03/03/2016 20:18

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

DownstairsMixUp · 03/03/2016 20:19

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

bojorojo · 03/03/2016 21:18

It is a course that gets oversubscribed. What you can do is work out exactly how your qualifications ( or credits) stack up against what the university actually wants. What is a time at university but a qualification not actually completed worth? It seemed like guesswork when you posted earlier. Did they think you were a bit risky?

If you don't have what they require, then how can you get it? Is there a relevant access course you can do? Could you fit in a necessary qualification. Also, talk to Admissions. You have nothing to lose. You can maybe then find out what the problem is. I didn't know there was an appeal via UCAS.

Also, be very clear about what they want to see on a Personal Statement. Look at lots of universities' Nursing courses to glean what they might advise. It is difficult to get it right so do a bit more research. You will get there!

Headofthehive55 · 03/03/2016 21:46

Try again next year. Keep doing your HCA work. It will be invaluable. It's a while since you did the nvq? Perhaps do some recent study? They normally like recent study in the last five years. The ou do some health and social care courses you might be interested in.

DownstairsMixUp · 03/03/2016 21:49

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

DownstairsMixUp · 03/03/2016 21:51

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

Headofthehive55 · 03/03/2016 22:18

If your personel statement was tuned to midwifery rather than nursing that might give you that result.

Normally I think people apply to one or the other and talior their statement to match. Unis like to think of them as very different professions. Even though lots are dual qualified.

Swipe left for the next trending thread