Report a problem
Judy's Book takes violations of our Terms of Use very seriously. We encourage
you to read through our
Terms of Use
before filling report with us.
After careful review, we may remove content or replace a content warning page before
viewing content deemed offensive, harmful, or dangerous.
Additionally, we are aware that there may be content on Judy's Book that is personal
in nature or feels invasive. Please note that Judy's Book is a provider of content
creation tools, not a mediator of content. We allow our users express their opinions,
but we don't make any claims about the content of these pages. We strongly believe
in freedom of expression, even if a review contains unappealing or distasteful
content or present negative viewpoints. We realize that this may be frustrating,
and we regret any inconvenience this may cause you. In cases where contact information
for the author is listed on the page, we recommend that you work directly with this
person to have the content in question removed or changed.
Here are some examples of content we will not remove unless provided with a court
order:
Personal attacks or alleged defamation
Political or social commentary
Distasteful imagery or language
If we've read the Terms of Use and believe that this review below violates our Terms
of Use, please complete the following short form.
Businiess name:
Medtech College
|
Review by:
citysearch c.
|
Review content:
Hello. I am a current student at Medtech. this is my fourth quarter. I am going to be an RN. I really wanted to take the time and speak out regarding accrediation rumors. There are obviously some people writing these reviews that truly don't know what nursing accrediation means. Here are a few points I should make \r
1) Medtech is FULLY accrediated by the Indiana State Board of Nursing. If they weren't, their nursing grads couldn't sit for the state boards (NCLEX). Initial accrediation means that a program is new and just recieved accredidation. It doesn't mean that the program isn't fully accredidated. \r
\r
2) NLNAC is not required for you to work as a nurse. A LICENSE is required. NLNAC is something that schools don't have to get. It also depends on what city/state you work in whether NLNAC is important. Most states won't even ask you where you went to school when you apply for a job. They know, as long as you have a license, you are qualified to be a nurse and work.\r
\r
M
|
Reasons for reporting (512 characters left):
|
Reasons are required.
|
or
Cancel
|