Healthcare shadowing before nursing school is one of the most valuable things you can do as a pre-nursing student. It confirms that nursing is the right path, gives you credible material for your application essays, and demonstrates to admissions committees that you’ve engaged with the profession thoughtfully.
Quick facts
- Most nursing programs do not require shadowing, but it strengthens your application
- Aim for 40–80 hours across different care settings
- Hospital volunteer programs, outreach emails to nurse managers, and formal shadow programs at large health systems are your best routes in
- Use shadowing to build a specific story, not just a line item on your resume
Does nursing school require shadowing?
Most BSN and ADN programs do not list shadowing as a formal admissions requirement. It is not on the checklist the way prerequisite GPA, TEAS scores, or letters of recommendation are.
That said, many programs strongly encourage it, and competitive applicants nearly always have some form of healthcare exposure. Admissions officers reading your personal statement want evidence that you understand what nursing actually involves before you commit two to four years to a program. Shadowing provides that evidence in a way that generic statements cannot.
A handful of programs – particularly accelerated BSN programs with selective cohorts – do list “healthcare experience” as a soft or hard requirement. Always read the specific program’s admissions page carefully, because the definition of “healthcare experience” may include paid work, volunteering, CNA work, or shadowing.
How many hours should you aim for?
There is no universal standard for nursing school shadowing hours. The benchmarks below reflect what competitive applicants typically have:
| Experience level | Hours | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum viable | 20–40 hrs | Enough to discuss meaningfully in an essay |
| Recommended | 40–80 hrs | Covers multiple settings or specialties |
| Strong candidate | 80–120 hrs | Demonstrates sustained commitment |
| Beyond typical | 120+ hrs | May overlap with clinical or volunteer work |
Spreading hours across two or more settings – say, an inpatient med-surg unit and a community health clinic – is more valuable than accumulating hours in a single location. It shows range and genuine curiosity.
Where to find shadowing opportunities
Finding shadowing can feel intimidating, but most health systems have more demand than capacity, so a clear, professional request usually gets a response.
Hospital volunteer programs. Many large hospitals run structured volunteer programs that include shadowing components. Start with the hospital’s volunteer services or community outreach office. These programs often come with orientation requirements, immunization verification, and a background check – plan for 2–4 weeks of lead time.
Formal shadow programs at major health systems. Systems like Cleveland Clinic, University of Kansas Health System, and Denver Health run structured nursing shadow experiences for students. These are typically 4–12 hour day placements. Search “[health system name] nursing shadow program” to find current offerings.
Direct outreach to nurse managers. A brief, professional email to a nurse manager or nursing educator on a unit you’re interested in often works better than going through hospital administration. Keep it short: who you are, what you’re pursuing, what you’re asking for (a few observation hours), and why that unit interests you.
Community health clinics and long-term care facilities. These settings are often more accessible than large hospitals, respond faster to student requests, and give you a different clinical picture than inpatient acute care. Ambulatory care, home health, and community nursing are legitimate and valuable settings.
Your network. If you know any nurses personally – through family, neighbors, or previous jobs – ask directly. A nurse who can vouch for you to their manager gets you past the first barrier immediately.
What to do during your shadowing hours
Passive observation wastes the opportunity. Use your time with a clear purpose.
Ask specific questions. Ask the nurse what the hardest part of their shift is, how they prioritize when multiple patients need attention at once, and what they wish they had known before entering nursing school. You’ll get honest, specific answers that you can reference in applications.
Notice the non-clinical work. Charting, care coordination, communication with physicians, discharge planning, patient education – most of nursing is not the dramatic clinical interventions you see on television. Understanding that mix is what separates a thoughtful applicant from one who just “watched nurses work.”
Observe across the shift. If possible, shadow for a full shift rather than a few hours. The rhythm of patient care, handoffs, and documentation changes throughout a shift, and you’ll understand the workload better.
Take notes immediately after. Write down what you saw, how it made you feel, and what surprised you. These notes become the raw material for your personal statement.
Maintain professional conduct. Arrive on time, wear appropriate attire (ask in advance), follow all privacy and HIPAA protocols, do not use your phone except where permitted, and thank the nurse in writing afterward. You may want to return to this contact for a letter of recommendation later.
What nursing programs expect you to learn from shadowing
Admissions committees are not looking for a log of hours. They want evidence of reflection and professional insight. When they ask about your shadowing experience – in an essay or an interview – they are assessing whether you:
- Understand what nurses actually do (beyond common assumptions)
- Can articulate why nursing specifically appeals to you, based on direct observation
- Have the maturity and emotional readiness that clinical environments require
- Are making an informed decision, not an idealized one
The weakest application responses to shadowing questions are: “It confirmed I want to be a nurse” or “I loved seeing how they helped patients.” These are vague. The strongest responses name a specific moment, explain what it revealed, and connect it to a concrete reason for pursuing nursing.
How to discuss shadowing in your nursing school application
Your personal statement and any supplemental essays are where shadowing pays off.
Use the specific, not the general. “During my 60 hours at [Hospital] shadowing an oncology nurse, I watched how she managed a patient’s pain escalation while simultaneously supporting the family in the room” is far more compelling than “I learned that nurses manage complex situations.”
Connect observation to motivation. The goal is not to describe what you saw – it’s to explain what it confirmed or changed about your decision to pursue nursing. What did you see that a classroom could not have shown you?
Mention the setting and specialty. Admissions readers want to know you were thoughtful in how you sought out experiences, not that you simply accumulated hours.
Prepare for interview questions. Common prompts include: “Tell me about a time you observed a nurse handle a difficult situation,” “What surprised you most about shadowing?” and “How did your shadowing experience shape your understanding of the nursing role?” Prepare a specific 2–3 minute answer for each.
When to start shadowing
Start as early as your junior year of high school if you’re a traditional student. For career changers and post-baccalaureate applicants, start shadowing at least 6–12 months before your application deadline. This gives you time to accumulate meaningful hours across different settings, write about the experience with enough distance to reflect clearly, and potentially return to the same contacts for a letter of recommendation.
If you’re applying to a program with a fall deadline, complete the bulk of your shadowing hours by the spring of the previous year – before you begin writing application materials.