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!

Specializes in Psych, Surgical, NICU.

I also took the ATI, yes it is an indicator of how well you will do on boards, I took my RN ATI, and have a 94-97% chance of passing boards. After you take the ATI you will be given a print out that shows the areas that you were strong and weak in and it even tell you areas to work on. It is hard but i feel it really prepared me for LPN boards! We will see how i do i take Rn boards tomorrow morning!! Good luck to you

Alison:p :balloons:

sr moore said:
Our school in California, uses the ATI tests. A lot of the other schools are using them now also. Does anyone know about theses? Are they a predictor for passing the NCLEX?

I did the ATI at my school also. Our instructors said it was a very good, accurate indicator of how well you will do on the NCLEX. When you get the printout at the end, it is quite surprising to see the numbers! If you get anything over a 70% on the ATI, you have a 99% predicted probability of passing the NCLEX. I got an 83.5 on the ATI so I went into the NCLEX feeling pretty good. Let's hope my feelings are right when I finally get my results!!!

Jaimee

Okay..someone help me out here.

I am having a hard time understanding how one can fail the NCLEX with only 60 questions (75 minus the 15 pilot questions). What is the point of having 265 questions if you can fail in 60?? I hope my question is making sense here.

It just doesn't compute in my overworked brain how one could possibly fail after the lowest number of questions. I know that the computer chooses questions based on your answers and then readjusts the level, etc. But that still doesn't help me understand.

Anyone have a good explanation? I am thinking that one would have to miss nearly all the questions to fail in 60.

Jaimee

1 Votes
Specializes in Cardiac.
JaimeeG said:
Okay..someone help me out here.

I am having a hard time understanding how one can fail the NCLEX with only 60 questions (75 minus the 15 pilot questions). What is the point of having 265 questions if you can fail in 60?? I hope my question is making sense here.

It just doesn't compute in my overworked brain how one could possibly fail after the lowest number of questions. I know that the computer chooses questions based on your answers and then readjusts the level, etc. But that still doesn't help me understand.

Anyone have a good explanation? I am thinking that one would have to miss nearly all the questions to fail in 60.

Jaimee

I think it means that you blew the test so badly that even if you were presented with the full 265 you still couldn't pull of a pass...

1 Votes
cardiacRN2006 said:
I think it means that you blew the test so badly that even if you were presented with the full 265 you still couldn't pull of a pass...

That would pretty much suck I guess :crying2:

I think I need to fly to Hawaii and stay there until someone notifies me that my test results are available. We got REALLY spoiled in school by having our test scores up before the end of the day that we took the test. This waiting game is the pits!!

Jaimee

1 Votes
Specializes in Cardiac.
JaimeeG said:
That would pretty much suck I guess :crying2:

I think I need to fly to Hawaii and stay there until someone notifies me that my test results are available. We got REALLY spoiled in school by having our test scores up before the end of the day that we took the test. This waiting game is the pits!!

Jaimee

How long does it usually take???????

cardiacRN2006 said:
How long does it usually take???????

The transcripts to be sent? The records department at our school said it could be up to 10 weeks. They are now only open Monday through Thursday for summer. It would be nice if I could comprehend why this is such a huge undertaking, but nobody in the records office can explain. There were only 48 of us who graduated, the final grades were submitted by the nursing dept. to records on May 23rd, and everything is computerized.

I hope that is what you were asking about!

Jaimee

Specializes in Pediatrics, Geriatrics, Call Center RN.
JaimeeG said:
I did the ATI at my school also. Our instructors said it was a very good, accurate indicator of how well you will do on the NCLEX. When you get the printout at the end, it is quite surprising to see the numbers! If you get anything over a 70% on the ATI, you have a 99% predicted probability of passing the NCLEX. I got an 83.5 on the ATI so I went into the NCLEX feeling pretty good. Let's hope my feelings are right when I finally get my results!!!

Jaimee

We use ATI as well. And I was wondering the same thing. So your instructors say that about the 70%? We really haven't been given too much information about it. It is just this PIA test we have to take with each section. Nobody likes taking them at our school and it is usually really disorganized. So by the time you actually get everyone seated at a computer you are so stressed when you begin you can't see straight anyway, let alone take a test.

1 Votes
RN2BLPN4NOW said:
We use ATI as well. And I was wondering the same thing. So your instructors say that about the 70%? We really haven't been given too much information about it. It is just this PIA test we have to take with each section. Nobody likes taking them at our school and it is usually really disorganized. So by the time you actually get everyone seated at a computer you are so stressed when you begin you can't see straight anyway, let alone take a test.

The 70% thing came from the ATI printout that you get at the end of the test. They give you a personalized printout that shows where you placed with regard to all others who have taken the test. It also shows your predicted probability of passing, which is where the 70% came from.

I thought the ATI that I took was MUCH easier than the NCLEX.

Jaimee

cjmmsn98 said:
HESI is a predictor test for NCLEX success. The highest numeric (raw) score you can attain on HESI is 1500.

For NCLEX, you would have to contact NCSBN.

Hello, I was wondering if there is any way to obtain a copy of a HESI test? Thanks, RNPONY

1 Votes
Specializes in Nursing Instructor & Asthma Educator.

No, the test is confidential and even those who take it may not have a copy.

Youc an go to the HESI website at

http://www.hesitest.com

to obtain study and review materials and get additional information.

Drexel University offers a review course fro NCLEX that includes a HESI exam as part of their course.

RNPONY said:
Hello, I was wondering if there is any way to obtain a copy of a HESI test?

Thanks, RNPONY

cjmmsn98 said:
No, the test is confidential and even those who take it may not have a copy.

Youc an go to the HESI website at

http://www.hesitest.com

to obtain study and review materials and get additional information.

Drexel University offers a review course fro NCLEX that includes a HESI exam as part of their course.

Oh okay, thanks for the information, I will look on their website and see if there is a way that I can take the HESI test. Hope it's not too expensive.

rnpony

1 Votes