Nursing

AuthorRachel Neithercut, programme support tutor
Posted on

Nursing is a vocational degree that develops your personal skills and professionalism, which are qualities valued by many employers

Work experience

Getting some related work experience in a clinical environment is strongly recommended if you want to work in the healthcare sector. Work experience gives you the opportunity to make important contacts, as well as increasing your knowledge of the industry.

Volunteering, internships, part-time jobs and student projects can all help to improve key skills which are looked for by employers.

Prepare by finding work as a care worker or healthcare assistant, volunteering in a hospital or with any other work experience that involves caring for others. Visiting hospitals and talking directly to nurses about the role is also helpful.

Search for placements and find out more about work experience and internships.

Typical employers

Opportunities can be found with the following employers:

  • the National Health Service (NHS)
  • private sector clinics and hospitals
  • private sector healthcare providers contracted to provide services to NHS patients
  • voluntary organisations
  • local authorities (for work in nursing and residential homes)
  • schools and further and higher education institutions
  • industry
  • prisons and the armed forces
  • private sector organisations, such as leisure cruise companies and private nursing homes
  • third sector organisations such as drug and alcohol services, homeless services and youth services.

Find out more about employers in healthcare, charity and voluntary work and other job sectors.

Skills for your CV

A degree in nursing gives you a range of professional and technical skills, including the ability to work as part of a multidisciplinary team and to support and advise patients and their families. You also develop the ability to assess, analyse, monitor and evaluate the care you deliver.

In more general terms, you gain skills and personal qualities sought by employers in a range of sectors. These include:

  • flexibility
  • adaptability
  • empathy
  • organisation and time management
  • leadership
  • determination and tenacity
  • the ability to conduct research
  • problem-solving and decision-making skills.
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Further study

A variety of post-registration courses are available. Graduate nurses can take Masters degrees in subjects such as advanced clinical practice and medical decision-making or undertake further training in areas such as school or community nursing. You can also train to become an advanced nurse practitioner.

Some of these options may be offered by your employer as part of your preceptorship (a structured programme of support for newly registered nurses) or as continuing professional development (CPD) activity to support the renewal of your registration through revalidation every three years. Healthcare is constantly developing, and practising nurses need to keep up with technology, current issues and the changing needs of the population through ongoing training.

For more information on further study and to find a course that interests you, see Masters degrees, search postgraduate courses in nursing and discover how to write a postgraduate nursing personal statement.

What do nursing graduates do?

Most (90%) nursing graduates are working as other registered nursing professionals (60%), registered community nurses (10%), registered specialists nurses (8%), registered mental health nurses (4%), registered nurse practitioners (4%), registered children's nurses (2%), nursing auxiliaries and assistants (1%) or midwifery nurses (0.3%) 15 months after graduation.

Graduate destinations for nursing
Destination Percentage
Employed 81.1
Further study 0.3
Working and studying 11.8
Unemployed 0.8
Other 6
Top 5 types of work entered in the UK
Type of work Percentage
Health 94.2
Childcare, health and education 1.9
Managers 1.4
Legal, social and welfare 1
Education 0.4

Find out what other graduates are doing after finishing their degrees in What do graduates do?

Graduate Outcomes survey data from HESA.

Find out more