Gabriella
New member
Hey everyone! I'm a nurse practitioner with 12 years of clinical experience, and I've been wanting to get my DNP for what feels like forever. But here's the thing—I work full-time, I have two kids, and the thought of spending 4-5 years on a doctorate plus writing a massive dissertation has kept me stuck in "someday" mode for way too long.
Then a colleague mentioned something that changed everything: there are actually legitimate 18-month doctorate without dissertation programs out there! I honestly didn't believe her at first. I thought all doctorates required years of research and a dissertation the size of a novel.
Well, I did my homework (because that's what we do, right?
), and I found some amazing options. I'm currently enrolled in Frontier Nursing University's online DNP program—it's 30 credit hours, can be completed in 18 months, and instead of a dissertation, we do a "rapid cycle quality improvement project" at our clinical site . It's practical, it's relevant to my actual job, and I don't have to become a full-time student to make it happen!
Here's what I've learned about these programs that I wish someone had told me years ago:


Then a colleague mentioned something that changed everything: there are actually legitimate 18-month doctorate without dissertation programs out there! I honestly didn't believe her at first. I thought all doctorates required years of research and a dissertation the size of a novel.
Well, I did my homework (because that's what we do, right?
Here's what I've learned about these programs that I wish someone had told me years ago:
- They're called "professional doctorates"
—degrees like DNP, EdD, DBA, DHA, DPT, and PsyD often offer alternatives to the traditional PhD dissertation . They focus on applying knowledge to real-world problems rather than producing theoretical research. - Capstone projects are the secret sauce
—instead of a 200-page dissertation, you do an applied project that actually matters in your workplace. For me, it's a quality improvement initiative at my clinic. For a DBA student, it might be a strategic business plan . You're still doing doctoral-level work, but it's practical! - Your experience counts
—many of these programs accept transfer credits from your master's degree and value your professional experience. That's how they condense everything into 18 months . - Accreditation matters most
—whether it's a dissertation or a capstone, what employers care about is that your degree comes from a regionally accredited institution. The diploma doesn't say "no dissertation" !