College of Nursing
College of Nursing
Learn how to lead and make a bigger impact on patients and care environments with our accredited online bachelor’s nursing degrees. Registered Nurses (RN) who want to raise their professional competencies can earn a bachelor’s nursing degree to build critical thinking, communication and leadership skills.
There’s more good news. Our traditional bachelor’s courses are online and only 5 weeks long. You can also choose to enroll in a competency-based credit program and take 4 courses at once during 16-week blocks. These choices give you the flexibility to begin class and study when it best fits your busy schedule. It’s a convenient way to build your nursing skills and prepare to positively influence patients and clinical environments, no matter how busy your life.
^Those transferring an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) may complete their program in 14 months. At the time of official evaluation students will be awarded 87 total credits from their ADN and valid unrestricted/unencumbered RN license. RNs without an ADN transfer will be awarded 40 total credits and may complete their degree in 2.5 years. While widely available, not all courses are available to residents of each state. Please check with an enrollment representative.
Get value from your education before you even graduate. Update your resumé and LinkedIn profile with learned skills when you complete every 5- or 6-week course in our associate, bachelor's and master's programs.
You’ll take 11 core courses with program-specific knowledge to gain added confidence and skills to expand your competency as an RN. These core courses include topics like: professional contemporary nursing practice, theoretical development and conceptual frameworks, and health information technology for nursing.
In this self-directed, faculty-assisted program, you’ll take 11 core courses with program-specific knowledge to gain greater confidence and skills to expand your competency as an RN. If you qualify for this program, you’ll take 4 courses at a time. The courses last 16 weeks per course. Core courses include topics like: professional contemporary nursing practice, theoretical development and conceptual frameworks, and health information technology for nursing.
From grants and scholarships to federal financial aid, there are a variety of ways to pay for school and save on tuition.
“I have loved the journey, and I have loved every class. I want to cry as I have finished another goal of mine. It’s been worth it all the way. This journey has changed my perspective, my personal nursing view, and my attitude. I am so thankful.”
—Michelle D.
RN to BSN, 2021
Over 1 million alumni have earned their degrees while balancing work, school and life. So can you.
Once you’ve selected your degree program, choose your start date from our calendar, apply for free and register before the deadline (usually one week before the program starts). Then you’ll speak to an enrollment representative to begin class.
Learn from accomplished, real-world faculty members who lead in the fields they teach. Our instructors go through a careful vetting process before joining our faculty ranks. They include industry leaders who encourage, challenge, and inspire our students. And with a student-faculty ratio of 32:1 [1], you’ll get the attention you need.
[1] This is a university-wide ratio. The College of Nursing student-faculty ratio may vary.
Meet Our Dean: Raelene Brooks, Ph.D., RN
Dr. Brooks is the Dean of the College of Nursing at the University of Phoenix. As a nursing researcher, she studied the long-term outcomes and weight regain in the bariatric surgery population and completed her PhD in Nursing Science at the University of San Diego.
Dr. Brooks has been a registered nurse for over 25 years and practiced extensively in the areas of: ICU, trauma, and critical care. Her publications include a focus on nursing education, critical care, and diversity, equity, and inclusion. Her role in a deanship span over a decade. She has attained tenure twice during her academic career in the state of California serving as a professor in prelicensure nursing education. She is an appointed Doris Howell Scholar and a champion for women’s health and wellness. She is an active member of several professional nursing associations including American Association of Colleges of Nursing, National League of Nursing, and Association for Critical Care Nursing.
“The healthcare of this nation is evolving at a rapid pace and there continues to be healthcare inequality,” states Brooks. “I am invested in preparing students to be innovative, inclusive, and creative decision makers. There is value in tradition. However, we cannot afford to stay confined to the traditional theory and framework in nursing education. Innovation, adaptation, and transformation in tandem with the traditional framework in nursing education will help to prepare our graduates to be contributors to the solution and meet the healthcare challenges facing our nation today and in the future.”
— Dr. Brooks
The baccalaureate degree program in nursing, master's degree program in nursing, and Doctor of Nursing Practice program at University of Phoenix are accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education, 655 K Street, NW, Suite 750, Washington, DC 20001, 202-887-6791. These programs are aligned with leading industry organizations, such as:
Your RN to BSN can be completed within 12 to 32 months. With your ADN, and depending on which degree option you’re pursuing, you could complete your degree in 12 to 14 months.
You can be an RN without a bachelor’s degree in nursing, but a bachelor’s degree may be required to help you qualify for positions with administrative, research, teaching and consulting responsibilities. In an online nursing degree program, you’ll take courses that help build holistic nursing, population health and information management skills.
Yes, all our courses are available 100% online. Where most colleges expect you to take several courses at once, in your traditional RN to BSN program you take one course at a time over five weeks, while the RN to BSN Competency-Based credit program requires 4 courses at a time during a 16-week period.
You’ll learn from faculty who bring their own real-world experience and practice the same knowledge and skills they teach. What’s more? Throughout the course of your learning experience, our academic counselors and finance advisors are always there to support and guide your decisions from day 1.
[2] Those transferring an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) may complete their program in 14 months. At the time of official evaluation students will be awarded 87 total credits from their ADN and valid unrestricted/unencumbered RN license. RNs without an ADN transfer will be awarded 40 total credits and may complete their degree in 2.5 years.