Mother and daughter nursing students head back to school together

Meet Tonya Kennedy and her daughter, Jess Cos, who are both studying to be nurses at 草莓视频.

In time for Mother鈥檚 Day, we spoke with them about what it鈥檚 like sharing their educational experiences and why being able to study close to home is a gamechanger.

Tonya is a student in Georgian鈥檚 Practical Nursing program. Jess is a graduate of the college鈥檚 Practical Nursing program and is currently studying to become a registered nurse through a bridging program between . And now Jess鈥 young daughter is even considering becoming a nurse.


A square of four images put together, showing the same two people in different images.

What鈥檚 it like sharing your educational journey as mother and daughter?

TONYA: It鈥檚 been really amazing. The first semester we were in school together. It was neat in the beginning because I was like, 鈥淥h I鈥檓 following in your footsteps,鈥 which is also kind of weird because usually it鈥檚 the kid who鈥檚 following in your footsteps.

It became more of a shared thing once she started school again as well. We鈥檙e both on the same ship, we鈥檙e both trying to get through nursing school. We talk about our courses and our content load.

Lots of times I鈥檝e said to her 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how you do it.鈥 I know what I鈥檓 going through, and I don鈥檛 have any little children who live with me like she does.

A family of five with four in postsecondary聽

I have another daughter and she also went back to school to become a librarian, and I have a son who just started university to eventually become a lawyer. He would have gone no matter what, but it鈥檚 kind of funny because we鈥檙e a family of five and now four of us are in school.

We joke with my husband, 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to stay working because who鈥檚 going to support all of us?鈥

JESS: It鈥檚 been really weird honestly, but in a good way. (laughs) It has been helpful. A lot of her clinical experience, she鈥檚 been able to pull in from my knowledge if she has any issues. She has tons of life experience, so at the start of my career I was pulling from her life experience. It just kind of comes full circle now.

An adult and a child pose for a photo together.

What鈥檚 it been like being able to study and then work in your home community?

JESS: It鈥檚 very convenient. With my schooling at Georgian, my Practical Nursing diploma, I got hired right away. I was very prepared going into my job. I felt really good about it.

Why do you want to be a nurse?

TONYA: My mother always tells me that when I was young I used to always say when I grow up I want to be a singer or a nurse.

I was a professional singer for 20 years, so it just sort of makes sense that I鈥檓 now fulfilling the other part when I was the five-year-old kid saying when I grow up this is what I want to be.

Between 2018 and 2020, I developed a Lady Gaga tribute show, but when the pandemic happened it just all came to a halt, there was nothing. It was pretty devastating.

A person with long straight hair, dressed in a bodysuit covered in mirror pieces and a hat, poses on a stage with purple and blue lights around them, in front of four back-up dancers in tights and crop tops.
Tonya Kennedy, centre, performing a Lady Gaga tribute.

I was sitting around the house with no job now, and I鈥檓 watching the news 24/7 about the pandemic. It just started to really break my heart all the trouble the long-term care homes were having.

It鈥檚 not in me to sit and let everyone else do the work. I鈥檓 a doer. So I called around to the nursing homes and said, 鈥淎re you taking volunteers?鈥 I had to do something.

鈥業t was like a total calling鈥

I volunteered at , and after about three weeks I thought, 鈥淚鈥檓 supposed to be here but I鈥檓 supposed to be a nurse.鈥 It was like a total calling.

I want to work in emergency. I鈥檓 a bit of an adrenaline junkie. I want to stand on a stage in front of thousands of people and sing, or I鈥檓 going to into emergency.

鈥業 didn鈥檛 see myself doing anything else鈥

JESS: It鈥檚 fast paced, so that鈥檚 good. I work in mental health, so it鈥檚 not a typical nursing job. We do a lot of assessing, which would be the biggest part of working in mental health.

Making sure everyone鈥檚 doing well and having to be fine-tuned when you see triggers or patients are showing signs that something鈥檚 not right. You have to be very focused on that. It鈥檚 a lot of multitasking.

I didn鈥檛 see myself doing anything else; it just seemed like the right move.

Jess, why did you want to continue your education to become a registered nurse (RN)?

There are definitely more opportunities for an RN, so that鈥檚 a huge part of it. Right now, I鈥檓 a frontline nurse so I would love to do something more in the background.

It just opens up so many more doors. I鈥檝e been at my workplace for nine years now, so I鈥檓 ready to explore different options.

Two people in formal dresses smile in a selfie.

What has your experience at 草莓视频been like?

TONYA: It has been really great. I鈥檝e had so many people ask me about becoming a nurse during the pandemic and whether I feel like I鈥檓 going to be ready to go into the workforce because there have been so many limitations due to the pandemic.

I don鈥檛 know how 草莓视频did it, but there haven鈥檛 really been limitations for us. We still went to the labs, we still had hands-on practising, and we had placements all throughout.

Plus, they鈥檝e given us some really great opportunities. I got to do two flu clinics, which I think is pretty cool.

A side view of a person in blue scrubs and face mask giving someone a vaccination injection in their arm.

Even the online learning thing has been OK, and the professors have been really wonderful about being available to us. 草莓视频has figured out how to make it work.

JESS: I鈥檝e got really good things to say about Georgian, which is why I went back. During my first time at 草莓视频it was really good. I learned a lot. It was right when the Sadlon Centre for Health and Wellness had just opened up.

It was very fancy and very in-depth in the labs, which was awesome. The class sizes were perfect. It wasn鈥檛 too big or too intimately small. The professors were awesome.

Studying during the pandemic has been stressful. Having to navigate the online schooling for me, plus my kids had online schooling, was chaotic.

But my young daughter is now thinking about becoming a nurse. She sees my husband and I 鈥 he鈥檚 also a nurse 鈥 so she鈥檚 very into what doing what mom wants to do. That鈥檚 something she鈥檚 exploring.

Two adults and a child smile for a selfie together.

What鈥檚 your advice for people considering a career in nursing?

TONYA: That fear of going back to school after so many years really held me back for a decade almost, where I was just so afraid. You鈥檙e still thinking about what other people are going to think of you. But after a very short time, I realized that nobody cared except for me.

I feel like, for anybody who鈥檚 older and wants to go back to school, especially for nursing, there鈥檚 never been a better time. There鈥檚 just such a call for nurses right now.

Anybody who has ever wanted to go into nursing or has ever considered it, now is the time, especially because .

One of my biggest fears about going back to school was that I had to go down to York. I didn鈥檛 want to go down there. Now you can do the whole thing in Barrie 鈥 it鈥檚 a dream come true.

JESS: Just be prepared. It鈥檚 not an easy job but it鈥檚 worth it. It all depends on where you work. There are harder jobs than others. My job is probably on the easier side, but mentally it鈥檚 very draining. But you see the change in people and you get to care for them and you know that you make a difference in someone鈥檚 life, so that鈥檚 nice.

Learn more about Georgian鈥檚 nursing programs, including Central Ontario鈥檚 first four-year , which launches this fall.

Our categories