For a working nurse, the idea of adding a university degree to a schedule already packed with 12-hour shifts, patient demands and emotional fatigue can seem impossible. You might ask: “When am I supposed to study? Between the handover and the medication rounds? Or on my one day off when I just want to sleep?”
These are valid concerns. However, thousands of healthcare professionals are upgrading their qualifications every year without pausing their careers. The secret isn't finding more time; it's maximising flexibility and integrating your studies into your daily work life.
The Bachelor of Health Sciences in the field of Nursing Systems Science (BHSciNSS) from Wits University is designed specifically for the working clinician. Because it is fully online and asynchronous, it bends to fit your roster, not the other way around.
Here is a practical guide to balancing work and study.
The Wits online model uses a "carousel" system with six start dates per year. This is a game-changer for nurses.
The strategy: Align your study load with your roster. If you know December is chaos in the trauma unit, or you have a block of night shifts coming up, you can choose not to register for a module in that cycle. Although it isn't always recommended due to the lose of momentum, you do have the freedom to step on and off the carousel as your professional life demands, ensuring you never have to choose between patient safety and passing an exam.
The most effective way to study while working is to stop seeing them as two separate worlds. The BHSciNSS curriculum is practical and systems-based.
The strategy: Apply theory immediately.
Traditional universities require attendance at specific times for lectures - impossible for a nurse on a shift. The Wits programme is asynchronous.
The strategy: Study when your brain is awake, not when the timetable says so. If you are a night owl or work night shifts, your "morning" might be 2pm. You can watch lectures, post on discussion boards and submit assignments at 3am or 3pm. The classroom is open 24/7.
Nurses are excellent team players. Studying should be no different.
The strategy: Use your peers. Your online cohort will consist of other nurses facing the exact same pressures. The discussion forums are not just for marks; they are support groups. Sharing tips on how others are managing a specific assignment while working a 60-hour week is invaluable. You are not doing this alone.
You don't always need a desk and a laptop to make progress.
The strategy: Use your break times efficiently. The Wits learning platform is accessible on mobile devices. You can read a journal article on your phone during a tea break or listen to a lecture podcast during your commute. Capturing these "dead moments" adds up to hours of study time over a week.
Balancing work and study is a short-term sacrifice for a long-term career transformation. It moves you from "surviving" the shift to "leading" the system.
You should budget between 10 to 14 hours per week per module. While this sounds like a lot, remember that this includes reading, watching videos and writing assignments. By breaking this down into 1-2 hours a day and a longer session on your off days, it becomes manageable.
Yes. The programme is designed around a carousel model, which explicitly allows you to take a break from your studies without losing credit. You can simply pick up on the next module available when you are ready to resume, providing the necessary flexibility for nurses who may face sudden increases in clinical workload. The university doesn't particularly recommend that you take a break, as experience has shown that students often lose momentum and do not carry on with their studies after pausing, but it is certainly an option.
No. There are very few "live" sessions, and attendance is not mandatory. Any live sessions that do occur are recorded and uploaded. You can watch them whenever your shift pattern allows, ensuring you never miss out on content due to work hours.
Yes, and it is encouraged! Many assignments ask you to reflect on your own clinical environment, such as conducting a quality audit of a process in your unit. This makes the assignment easier to write because you already know the context, and it adds value to your employer. Just ensure you anonymise patient and institutional data to protect confidentiality.
For full-time working nurses, Wits strongly advises taking one module at a time, especially when starting. This allows you to gauge the workload without burning out. Once you are comfortable with the rhythm of online study, you might consider two modules during quieter periods at work, but pacing yourself is the secret to success.