Long before he ever put on scrubs, Christopher Jarvi was drawn to roles rooted in service and protection. His path to becoming a nurse was never a straight line, but every turn prepared him for the moment he now finds himself in – on the cusp of graduation from 鶹ѡ at Ashtabula, confident, steady and ready to step into a profession built on compassion and skill.
As a high school student at the Ashtabula County Technical and Career Campus (A-Tech) he earned his firefighter and EMT certifications, discovering early that he wanted to be someone people could rely on in moments of need. After graduation, he enrolled at a community college, but the experience left him disillusioned. “You could really tell that they don’t care about you,” he recalled. “You were a number, and whether you pass or fail, they didn’t care.”
After earning his degree, Jarvi enlisted in the Marine Corps, serving three years before transitioning into work as a correctional officer. For five years, he learned to communicate under pressure, de-escalate tense situations and build trust with people who often expected the opposite. “Convincing them that you’re not the enemy… that you have the same goal for them to get out and stay out is a great challenge,” he said. Those skills – patience, empathy, clarity – would later become invaluable in nursing.
The idea of returning to school for nursing didn’t fully take shape until his wife, Raechelle, passed her NCLEX and began her own career in the field. With her support, and the stability her new job provided, the timing finally felt right. But Jarvi knew he needed a very different college experience than the one he’d had before.
He began by reaching out to his previous school again, but the same frustrations resurfaced: confusion, delays and a sense that no one was invested in helping him move forward. So, he looked elsewhere. A few people had mentioned 鶹ѡAshtabula’s nursing program and they were overwhelmingly positive. That was enough for him to schedule a visit.
“You can’t walk into a room (here) without finding a smile and a helping hand. The staff are knowledgeable and they’re here for you. You’ll be able to feel that – almost physically feel it – and how deep it is.”
Within minutes of meeting academic advisor Paula Ghiz, he knew he had found the right place. “Within the first five minutes of talking to Paula, I was sure this was the right place for me,” he said. “She cares. She has a depth of knowledge. … She had all the paperwork ready for us to fill out together. Same day, I was signed up and ready to go.”
That warmth and competence, he soon learned, extended far beyond the admissions process. From the first day of classes, Jarvi felt the difference. Instructors didn’t lecture at students; they talked with them. They didn’t just present information; they made sure students understood it, could apply it and felt supported along the way. “They’re having a conversation with you about the material,” he explained. “They’re adjusting your understanding if it needs it. … You can tell that they care through how they teach.”
The transition from public safety to nursing, which he once expected to be daunting, turned out to be surprisingly smooth. The faculty’s passion, he said, was “infectious,” and the more he learned, the more invested he became. Even casual conversations with classmates began to revolve around topics that had once felt like a foreign language.
Clinical rotations took him across Northeast Ohio such as the Cleveland Clinic, Ashtabula County Medical Center, Geneva, Geauga and several mental health facilities. Each site offered a new perspective, a new challenge and a new opportunity to grow. He explored cardiac care, the catheterization lab, the emergency room, the operating room and more. The variety helped him discover where he felt most at home.
Medical surgery quickly rose to the top of his list. “It’ll set me up with a great foundation of knowledge,” he said. “It’ll set me up for success no matter which specialty I want to go into later.” Post-operative care also caught his interest – an area where his wife already works and where he could see himself thriving in the future.
Through it all, Jarvi never doubted his decision to pursue nursing. “I’m pretty steadfast in my decisions,” he said. “This was the right move for sure.” The support of his classmates and his wife played a major role in that confidence. Group study sessions became essential, and Raechelle’s experience as a nurse helped him navigate some of the tougher concepts. “I wouldn’t have made it without them,” he said.
Now, as he prepares to graduate, Jarvi is focused on the next steps. He plans to take the NCLEX about a month after graduation, using Kaplan resources to sharpen his skills. After that, he hopes to join Raechelle at Ashtabula Regional Medical Center and begin his nursing career.
Looking back, he knows the journey wasn’t easy, but it was meaningful. Every job, every challenge, every moment of uncertainty brought him closer to a profession where he can finally combine his lifelong desire to help others with the deep, practical knowledge needed to make a difference.
And for anyone considering a similar leap – whether from another career or another college – Jarvi has simple advice: visit 鶹ѡAshtabula. “You can’t walk into a room without finding a smile and a helping hand,” he said. “The staff are knowledgeable and they’re here for you. You’ll be able to feel that – almost physically feel it – and how deep it is.”
For Christopher Jarvi, that feeling made all the difference. And now, as he steps into the nursing profession, he’s ready to be that steady, compassionate presence for others.
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