NCLEX Number of Questions and Clarification

ALL STUDENTS PLEASE READ. I teach a semester long course to prep our grads for NCLEX. Please read this entire post carefully. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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The NCLEX adapts to your skill level. The first questions that are presented are determining your ability level. Once that ability level is determined, the questions are presented in increasing level of difficulty/decreasing difficulty until you have answered enough questions for the computer to determine (with 95% statistical certainty) that you have met the passing standard.

The minimum number of questions you will have is 75 (60 questions plus 15 pilot items). You will not be able to distinguish pilot items from "real" items. SO, if you get 265 items, that means the computer has not yet determined that you have met the passing standard at the 95% confidence level. There is no random number of candidates that get the exam with 265 questions- that is a myth.

You will not be able to tell whether you have passed by the number of questions you get!

The test is 6 hours long, and you should take your time. You have paid $200 for that test seat- USE IT!

Rushing through the questions or rapid guessing will most likely lead to failure, because each one you get wrong due to guessing means the next question is easier, and then on and on, until you fail because you are guessing at them all. Take your time to think each question through.

You will not leave the exam feeling good- the test challenges every bit of you, so you will feel tired and unsure of yourself. The way you feel does not equate into passing or failing. You cannot judge. Wait for your results.

NCLEX is given throughout the US and its territories, so the same format is used and the same question bank is used across the US. You do not have to take the exam in the same state where you are applying for licensure.

These are some resources for NCLEX prep that I like (no monetary incentive for sharing).

NCSBN's Review:

Kaplan

I am impressed with the strategy that is taught in the Kaplan course.

Lastly, you must manage anxiety. Pay attention to strategies to reduce anxiety. Approach each question as a new patient- one at a time, and focus completely on that question (patient).

Do not get distracted by thoughts of passing or failing, or by focusing on the number of questions you have had. Just keep going, one at a time, until the test ends. Then- be good to yourself while you wait for results. Remember you will not be able to accurately judge whether you passed by the way you feel. The test challenges you and you will not feel great when it is over.

Best wishes for success!

Thanks catherine and everyone else for the info....I'm taking the NCLEX in June....my school also uses HESI at the end of each semester and we need a 900 in order to progress on to the next semester....I found the Psych HESI the hardest of them all in march I take the EXIT (simulates the NCLEX) i need a 900 ,to pass in order to graduate ....wish me luck....Good luck to every one...and Thanks one more time for the info.

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Thanks for the information, very helpfull. I have a question. What testbook do you think will be of great help for review, and also do you think Kaplan is helpful or do you have idea of anyother class.

Thanks

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hotchocolate said:
Thanks for the information, very helpfull. I have a question. What testbook do you think will be of great help for review, and also do you think Kaplan is helpful or do you have idea of anyother class.

Thanks

I use Saunders Review 2nd edition, it also comes with a CD...For HESI..I went to their web site and bought their book and CD...http://www.hesitest.com..I find Saunders very useful..I use it as a study guide for my class exams....I hope this is helpful...Good luck

my friend only answered 75 questions and failed.

I had 130 questions today and I felt like they were so hard....is that a good or bad sign. I am going crazy right now. I just want to know. Is it true that if you go over the 75 questions that you are on the fence of passing or failing?

JEnn

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jennijen56 said:
I had 130 questions today and I felt like they were so hard....is that a good or bad sign. I am going crazy right now. I just want to know. Is it true that if you go over the 75 questions that you are on the fence of passing or failing?

JEnn

Think happy thoughts .....i know someone who answered 150 questions and passed....let us know how you did?..good luck.

Specializes in Nursing Instructor & Asthma Educator.

I agree- think good thoughts.

By the time you read thismessage, I hope you have passed!

The questions keep coming until you clearly meet or do not meet the passing standard, and the average number of questions presented is around 120.

You can get 265 questions and pass, however. If that happens, it means that you were so close to the passing standard that they had to keep resenting questions until it could be statistically clear that you either met or did not meet the passing standard.

No one feels like they aced this exam afterwards...it is challenging for all. 3 of my students who just took it had this to say before they knew theiy passed-

it was brutal!

Just know that you will not feel like you did well You WILL feel challenged.

And you may also have passed!

Welcome to nursing...

Take care.

luvnsg said:
Think happy thoughts .....i know someone who answered 150 questions and passed....let us know how you did?..good luck.
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Specializes in RN, BSN, CHDN.
jennijen56 said:
I had 130 questions today and I felt like they were so hard....is that a good or bad sign. I am going crazy right now. I just want to know. Is it true that if you go over the 75 questions that you are on the fence of passing or failing?

JEnn

I did 105 and it was very hard I couldnt believe it. Good luck

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Thanks for all the awesome info everyone and good luck to those about to take the NCLEX. I myself will be taking them soon too however I have yet to schedule a date due to not feeling absolutely ready (I graduated Dec 18th '04).

For those of you who have already taken the exam and passed CONGRATS!

Do they tell you that you've just passed or do you get an actual score? ?

Thanks again everyone! ?

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...is the NCLEX still giving both the trade and generic names of medications? The instructors at my program mentioned that NCLEX was going to begin giving only the generic drug names soon.

nurstudnt546 said:
Thanks for all the awesome info everyone and good luck to those about to take the NCLEX. I myself will be taking them soon too however I have yet to schedule a date due to not feeling absolutely ready (I graduated Dec 18th '04).

For those of you who have already taken the exam and passed CONGRATS!

Do they tell you that you've just passed or do you get an actual score? ?

Thanks again everyone! ?

Hi, to answer your question, I just took the NCLEX in December-- you don't get an actual score, only that you passed which in PA can be checked on the internet, then you just get your license in the mail about 2 weeks later. And, for med questions, they did give me the trade and generic name but the questions I had with pharm in it really weren't straight pharm questions- it was more inner related w/ the pathology of the pt. But, I passed in 75- and am quite relieved to be done and call myself an RN. Wow, what a priviledge after all the sacrifice- good luck everyone!! and be confident!

Thanks nursing04 for the info and congrats on passing boards and becoming an official RN. It must feel great. I will be in your shoes very soon ... :)

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