OK - my settings are for UK questions only so I'm guessing you mean the British Army, right? In that case ignore all the previous answers as they are talking about US Forces.
If you join as a student nurse then you will do your basic military training before going to B'ham for nurse training. If you train in the army you will be paid while you are training and you have a job guaranteed when you graduate. If you train as a civvy then you will a huge student debt to repay and no guarantee you will be accepted into the army or even be able to get a job.
Once you are qualified, I think you are only tied to the army for around 3 years (but that may have changed). And once you have 2 years experience you can apply for a commission.
If it was me then I would apply to join the army as a student nurse. I got all my professional qualifications in the army medical services, stayed for 22 years and loved every moment of it!
2007-06-06 10:18:31
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Army Student Nurse
2016-11-13 22:33:00
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Army Nurse Training
2017-01-01 06:33:50
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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First of all, if you want to join the service, join the Air Force, not the Army! The bases are better (with more services, better service, newer buildings & housing, etc.), they are deployed less, and are less likely to be killed/wounded in action.
That said, apply for an ROTC scholarship! Your schooling will be paid for & you may receive a stipend for books and living expenses. While in school you will learn valuable leadership skills in the ROTC program that will serve you when you graduate and are commissioned as an officer. You will then owe about four years, after which you can decide if you want to stay in or get out.
My husband did this and then also won a slot for a graduate program and got a master's degree, too.
2007-06-06 08:46:51
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answer #4
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answered by Cameron 2
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In Britain or America? In Britain you're better doing your nursing qualification then you simply have to complete the 'vicars and tarts' course (professionally qualified officers) at sandhurst to recieve higher pay and status from the start.
Plus you get the experience of uni which I wouldn't change for the world. With the debt issue, if you pass your AOSB and manage to secure a bursary, the army will pay you a large amount of money throughout your period of study (£6000 over 3 yrs, £7 or £8,000 for 4 or 5 yrs) to take up a commission after you finish your degree. This probably wont eliminate your debt, but it will help to substancially reduce it.
2007-06-06 12:54:58
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answer #5
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answered by rich w 2
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A friend of mine did her advanced diploma first then joined the army as a qualified nurse. I believe she went in at a higher rate of pay. However it depends on when you can enter nurse training, there are very few places and a waiting list, also very few jobs at the end of your training. If you can get into army nurse training sooner then go for it. You will also get a higher rate of pay at the end of your training than sivvy nursing.
2007-06-06 08:57:23
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answer #6
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answered by helen b 3
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Regardless of what below answerer says do not ignore this this is tailored for British military
Talk to your recruiter, if he offers you to do a degree course when in take his offer, they often give these offers. My brother took one for engineering, I'm aiming for a general degree throught hem.
If you do your degree you do 3 years at uni, then join the army and do 4 years in. If you sign up for the army with a degree agreement you'll do your training, then do your 3 years at university, then do your further 3 years in the army (sometimes they still actually put degree first and do the full 4 years after - they did my brothers training first, they offered to do mine after). So whats the difference, both minimum of 4 years in the army, both 3 years at university; the difference is a minimum of £10000 in tuition fees, plus many additional costs the army will soak up, so its up to you really. You'll do the same years minimum in army and uni no matter what, so all you have to think is do you want to pay for it out of your pocket or get the army to?
This all assumes they give you a suitable offer obviously, go and talk to them to find out. If they're paying you for a full degree they expect you to go commisioned, or though with nursing this may be slightly different.
One of my cousins went through the army got his medical degree, became a medical officer, got attatched to Royal Marines, left and is now working up the ladder in civilian medicine and is becoming very well regarded in his field, getting invited across the worlds to host talks (hes evidently a lot older than me). The army paid for all his training and you could say he owes everything in life to them, the training, the eperience, that alloed him to get where he is.
2007-06-06 09:41:39
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answer #7
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answered by Chris 4
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2016-04-13 13:47:51
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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Definitely get your college and nursing degree completed BEFORE you join -- you can attend college while in the Army, but you'll end up owing them a LOT of time (not just the usual 8 years). I have a friend who got his Nurse Anesthetist degree while in the Army, and while is is a Captain now, he is 'working out' the 4 years they added on his tour of duty before he can retire. It's always better to go in as an office anyway!
I wish you well!
2007-06-06 08:26:16
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Qualify as a nurse first then join, because regardless of what your recruiter tells you, you will not have enough time to go to school. You will either be deployed, on staff duty or in a unit that doesn't deploy but goes to the field all the time anticipating deployment. And with nursing you cannot miss lab classes.
2007-06-06 08:26:35
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answer #10
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answered by Virgo27 6
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