Encouraging nclex advice needed

Nursing Students NCLEX

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I have recently taken the NCLEX twice now, and in desperate need of advice. ONLY encouraging and positive advice, PLEASE. I am my own worst critic and I want to become a nurse so badly, that anyone telling me I should give up would not help me in any way. It would only make me more depressed.

Both attempts of the NCLEX I have gotten all 265 questions. When I received my letter of results I was "Nearly passing" on ALL categories on BOTH attempts. It's frustrating because though I'm close, I can't seem to stay above the passing line. I did Hurst review and still am using it to study.

If anyone has been in a similar situation and overcame this struggle please let me know what helped you! I'm about to start intensively studying again. Both NCLEX attempts I studied a ton, so as you can see I'm very discouraged to begin again. As stated above, this is my ultimate DREAM and I am so saddened that I am having such a hard time with this. I've always struggled with tests, but I believe I can do this!

If anyone used the Saunders comprehensive review book I'm curious as to how people used it to study. I purchased it, but I seem to have trouble finding an effective way to use it because it's so much material! If anyone created a study calendar or so using this resource or anything else please share as well.

Thanks everyone!

Specializes in Medical and general practice now LTC.

Moved to the NCLEX forum where there is much written on passing the exam.

Good luck

Specializes in Psych, Eating Disorders.

I believe it's because of Kaplan that I passed first try in 75 questions. I took the full Kaplan course online. They really show you how to approach each question, and how to break in down. They train your brain to think NCLEX. I used those tools while taking the actual exam and it worked. I did all of the questions trainers and used QBank to make up my own tests for my weak areas.

I strongly suggest Kaplan.

Do tons of practice questions. READ THE RATIONALE! Even for correct answers as it reinforces the material. Try to do most of them in test mode (at a desk, quiet environment).

Use the study guide that other users on this site shared. Make a short set of notes for the main chunk of things (lab values, meds, things you struggle with memorizing) and look at them more than once a day.

Get good sleep the night before your exam. On the day of your exam: eat a good meal, don't overdo the caffeine, go to the bathroom before you test, wear layers in case you get hot.

Good luck!

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