Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
Canadian Nurses /

FAQ: The Canadian Registered Nurse Examination (CRNE)



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 385,893 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Thread Closed

Available for reading only.
 

Feb 14, 2009 12:57 AM

FAQ: The Canadian Registered Nurse Examination (CRNE)

by janfrn Staff
Updated Mar 20, 2009 at 11:47 AM by janfrn

There seems to be a lot of confusion and repetition on this forum regarding the Canadian Registered Nurse Examination. The most frequently asked questions and their replies have been compiled for you here.
  • What is the Canadian Registered Nurse Examination? The CRNE is the national licensing examination for Canadian nursing school graduates and nurses from other countries who wish to practice nursing in Canada. The exam is designed to test basic competencies expected of a beginner registered nurse in Canada. It is a paper and pencil examination comprised of about 300 questions. Currently (2009) the exam is entirely composed of multiple choice questions; in 2010 a number of short answer questions will be included.
  • What resources should I use when studying for the exam? The Canadian Nurses Association offers two resources, Canadian Registered Nurse Exam Prep Guide and the LeaRN™ CRNE Readiness Test. The can be purchased through the CNA office. Lippincott's CRNE Prep Guide and Mosby's Prep Guide for the Canadian RN Exam are two other excellent choices. These books are available through Amazon and Chapters-Indigo. None of them are cheap, but they're worth the money.
  • How is the exam scored? For multiple choice questions there is only one correct response for each question. There may be responses that are similar or contain partially correct responses, but there will only be one absolutely correct response and each correct response is given one mark. The multiple choice section is marked by computer scan. The short answer questions have three parts. Scoring is performed by a team of content experts based on the presence of correct responses matching those on the scorer's list of acceptable responses. Marks are awarded on a scale from 0-3; part marks are possible for partially correct responses. However, multiple choice and short answer questions are weighted identically so in order to receive a mark for a short answer question, all responses must be correct. The two parts are scored separately; the total number of points achieved on the short answer questions are added up then divided by 3 to obtain the aggregate score for that section. The two sections are then added together to obtain the final mark.
  • What's a passing mark on the CRNE? The standard passing score ranges from 59-68%. BUT the standard passing score is determined by the level of difficulty of the exam as established by the CRNE examination committee. Each exam is set by the committee using a pool of thousands of stock questions created by nursing educators across the country. The pool of questions is constantly changing, as is the composition of the exam. No two exams are ever more than superficially similar. The actual mark achieved only matters as it compares to the standard set for that specific exam. Results are reported to the candidate as either "pass" or "fail".
  • How do I apply to write the CRNE? Only new Canadian nursing school graduates apply to write the CRNE. If the applicant is a nurse educated outside of Canada (IEN), the candidate isn't applying to write the CRNE, but rather applying for a permit to practice nursing in the province where they live or wish to live. The College of Registered Nurses for the province will assess the candidate's education as compared to the provincially accepted standard, which is not required for new graduates of local nursing schools. If the candidate's educational preparation is acceptable, they are given permission to write the exam, after which they may apply for full licensure in that province. If the candidate's education and/or experience is not equivalent to the province's standard there are additional steps the IEN must take before permission will be granted. The deadline for applications to write (which must include payment of all fees) is usually 90 days prior to the exam date.
  • Why does it take so long to get the results? When I wrote the NCLEX I had my results in a week. The NCLEX is administered completely differently than the CRNE. It is a computerized exam that is graded as it's being written. The results are electronically communicated with the board of nursing from which the candidate received authorization to write from. Once the BON has the results the candidate can have the results. In Canada, the paper and pencil format slows things down. There are only a limited number of testing locations in each province due to population concentrations. All exams are then submitted by mail to the Canadian Nurses' Association in Ottawa to be scored. The scoring does not begin until all 10 provinces and 3 territories have submitted their exams. Once the scoring is done, the results are collated by province and then communicated by mail with the College of Nursing in the province where the candidate wrote the exam. The province is then responsible for communicating the results by mail to the candidate. The process usually takes between 4 and 8 weeks, depending on the time of year and the volume of exams submitted.
  • What happens if I fail the exam? That depends on the province. Some will allow the candidate to continue to work as a graduate nurse as long as their temporary permit is kept current. Others will revoke the temporary permit as soon as they know the candidate has failed. To find out how the provinces will respond, look at the sticky linking to the Colleges of Nursing.
  • How many chances to I get to pass? No province will allow more than three attempts. The majority will require the passing of a nursing refresher course after the second unsuccessful attempt before giving permission to write the third time. Three strikes and you go back to nursing school or choose another profession.
  • If I fail the third time, can't I just be a practical nurse? No, not automatically. The College of Practical Nurses in your province will determine what you will have to do to qualify to write their exam. (Yes, more exams.) LPNs/ RPNs are regulated health professions just as registered nurses are, and are held to the requirements set out in provincial legislation. And it's entirely possible that if you weren't able to pass the CRNE, you might not be able to pass the CLPNE either.
  • I've already passed the NCLEX. Why do I have to write the CRNE? The NCLEX has nothing to do with Canadian nursing regulation at all. The exams are very different in many ways. Canada has a single payer health care system; we take a different approach to health promotion and preventive medicine. The CRNE focuses on those competencies that will aid the candidate to integrate into the Canadian health care system and contains a large psychosocial component. There is much less concentration on clinical knowledge and pathophysiology of diesase and more on communication and primary care. A candidate could answer 265 NCLEX questions correctly and still fail the CRNE.
  • How can I get more information? Contact the College of Nursing in your province, or contact the Canadian Nurses' Association. http://www.cna-aiic.ca/cna/default_e.aspx


Share: Submit Thread to Facebook Submit Thread to Twitter Submit Thread to Technorati Submit Thread to Google Submit Thread to Reddit

Search Tags
application, college of nursing, crne, exam, results
Top

8 Readers Gave Kudos

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Closed Thread




Thread Tools


Who's Online
456 members
4,057 guests
4,513

3

Hospital bill stuns slain student’s parents: $ 30,000 for 5...

16

Doctors-in-short-supply-responsibilities-for-nurses-may-expa...

8

Less regular sleep for ICU nurses may lead to errors

16

Nurse sends unused medical supplies to needy nations

24

Premature Births Are Fueling Higher Rates of Infant...

6

MRSA Strain Linked to High Death Rates

25

RI hospital fined $150,000 in 5th wrong-site surgery since...

64

Nursing: One of the 6 Thriving Jobs that are Here to Stay???

90

Dad Fights Hospital to Keep Baby on Life Support

12

A nurse can dream...about awesome nursing






Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: