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I am a Nursing student in OH and I just started the LPN program 1 month ago and I am having trouble with the tests. Any study tips would be great. I am feeling very discouraged and would like any advice. Thank you so much

Specializes in RN, BSN, CHDN.

Hi Welcome to allnurses, I have moved your thread to the LPN student nurse forum

Specializes in 6 yrs LTC, 1 yr MedSurg, Wound Care.

Have you tried using Quizlet for flashcards? Either make your own or search and see if someone has already made them for whichever class/chapters you are taking; that's happened for me a LOT. Sometimes, instead of writing out notes, I type them up in Quizlet so that i can use them as flashcards and study that. Quizlet has a smartphone app that will read your flashcards to you. I have a 45 minute drive to school so that helps me more than I can say. You can create an account for free, it doesn't cost anything to use it.

Let's see, we have a PowerPoint for each chapter we work on that is a good review right before you test. Sometimes they'll have stuff in them that i didn't remember seeing in the chapters.

Read the review/bullet points at the end of your chapters.

Go over the key terms for your chapter (Quizlet is good for this too).

If you do study guides/work sheets, read over those.

Any time you can read a rationale, DO IT! If i could have a book just with rationales, I would jump all over it! Lol

That's all I can think of right now. If you'll post what you're already doing, maybe we can come up with something that will help you elaborate on it.

I just finished my LPN program this past summer and wrote the NCLEX-PN earlier today (!) so I'm hoping that some of my advice might be useful to you. :)

What I found worked for me with studying was actually "teaching" the material to my husband, my cats, my dogs...you get the idea. I would literally discuss different concepts whenever I could and I found that having someone ask me questions about it really helped me to gain a more thorough knowledge of the subject. I also took a LOT of notes; not only in class, but as I was reading through the material again at home after class and before our weekly exam. Somehow seeing the information in my own handwriting and connecting with it through re-writing it (in words/ terminology which made sense to me) helped. I limited my use of flashcards, and only really used them for important lab values and medical terminology that I knew that was important. Don't get sucked into the trap of making tons of flashcards every week and thinking that memorizing every word is important-- your critical thinking skills will get you further.

Routine was also really important to me; I had a set number of hours that I would review class material every day, and I kept all of my textbooks and notebooks in an accessible (and highly visible) place where it was easy to sit down for half an hour at a time and just go over things. I found that tripping over my materials served as a good motivation to study. ;) As you start clinicals this routine is going to be really important, as your care plans are going to take up a lot more time than you might think.

Good luck! You CAN do this! Please let me know how things are going for you.

How have things been going for you, jordankb?

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