Bachelor's Degree in Nursing
*NEW* Direct Admission Pathway for High School Students applying for Fall 2025
High school seniors applying for admission to the University of St. Thomas now have the opportunity to be directly admitted into the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program! First-time, first year domestic and international students must meet the following criteria to be considered for Direct Admission:
- High school GPA of 3.75 or higher.
- Select Nursing as your major and complete an additional essay question when applying to the University of St. Thomas (via Common App or St. Thomas application).
- Apply by December 1.
- Acceptance into the University of St. Thomas.
Students will first be informed of their admission into the university and their Direct Admission into the BSN program decision will be communicated directly from the School of Nursing after December 15.
*Transfer students and Tommies who did not gain admission to the BSN program via Direct Admission will have the opportunity to apply to the BSN program via the General Admission Pathway.
Earn Your Bachelor's Degree in Nursing
Minnesota and the United States more broadly are experiencing a nursing shortage. The field of nursing needs more professionals who approach health care from a whole-person perspective, recognizing the many factors that contribute to a person's health and well-being.
In the Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of St. Thomas program, you will be prepared to enter this high-demand field and provide the care, advocacy and interprofessional collaboration so urgently needed in the field.
Graduates will be educated to work as generalists in a variety of settings. The program will prepare you to sit for the National Council of State Boards of Nursing NCLEX-RN® licensure exam. Over the course of earning your degree, you'll gain real-world experience during work in a clinical setting.
Why St. Thomas?
The Bachelor of Science in Nursing program provides a unique emphasis on whole-person wellness, social determinants of health and health equity, interprofessional collaboration, and advocacy and systems change. St. Thomas seeks to help serve the health needs of diverse populations in urban and rural areas by training culturally responsive nurses who proactively improve whole-person healing.