<p>Is it easier to get into the School of Nursing and Health Sciences or the College of Arts and Sciences?</p>
<p>Also, how easy is it to transfer to/fro these schools?</p>
<p>Is it easier to get into the School of Nursing and Health Sciences or the College of Arts and Sciences?</p>
<p>Also, how easy is it to transfer to/fro these schools?</p>
<p>nursing is easier than the college</p>
<p>don't apply to a school because you think it is easier to get into, apply to the one you are genuinely interested in</p>
<p>good point</p>
<p>i thought i had it all figured out but i found the international health degree program to be very attractive. i didnt know about this until yesterday so i'm going to have to alter a couple forms, no biggie.</p>
<p>do a search for some of my posts. I've discussed this many times. Basically, NHS has a higher acceptance rate than the College. This is because NHS is more of a self-selective applicant pool. Most people that apply are specifically interested in health care/nursing, and therefore NHS can accept more people. To get accepted to NHS, you must show a sincere interest in nursing or health studies. The NHS majors are very pre-professional, so you have to fit the targeted student profile. I'm an NHS Admissions Ambassador as well as an I-health major. If you're interested in International Health(it's awesome!), then show why you're interested, and what you plan to do after you graduate with the degree. NHS has four very specific majors(Nursing, International Health, Human Science, Healthcare Management and Policy), therefore you need to be sure that you have an actual interest in the program you are applying to. Also, it is pretty easy to transfer between schools. I was in the College freshman year, and transferred into NHS between fresh. and sophomore years. A number of people do this.</p>