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"near passing standard"



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Dec 07, 2006 08:54 AM

"near passing standard"


Hey everyone.

I failed my first attempt at the NCLEX and am about to take it again. On the letter you're sent saying you passed/failed, on the back it shows each category and 'above passing standard' 'near passing standard' or 'below passing standard'. What's the difference if you're near or below? You either passed or failed that section.....I'm just curious because if I have a few categories that were 'near' the passing standard, do I need to study those harder as well as the ones that were below? I'm only curious...I couldn't figure out the difference, and why they would tell you you were 'near' the passing standard. Ok I Just read this and it sounds confusing, hopefully someone knows what I'm talking about! Thanks everyone!

Candice
TX


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from grace_0310
Old Dec 07, 2006, 09:15 AM

Default Re: "near passing standard"
got this from http://www.***********/healthcare/Exams/nclex.shtml

"After you have answered the minimum number of questions, the computer compares your competence level to the passing standard and makes one of three decisions:
One, if you are clearly above the passing standard, you pass and the examination ends.
Two, if you are clearly below the passing standard, then you fail and the examination ends.
Three, if your competence level is close enough to the passing standard that it's still not clear whether you should pass or not, then the computer continues to ask you questions.
"Clearly" passing or failing is defined as when the "gray zone" around your competence level falls entirely above or below the passing standard. The gray zone is the region within which your competence level might vary if you answer more questions. The gray zone shrinks a little after each question because your competence level is based on more information.

After each question, your competence level and the gray zone are recomputed, adding your new response to all of your previous answers. When the gray zone is entirely on one side or the other of the passing standard, you've clearly passed or failed and the examination ends.
Of course, some people's competence level is very close to the passing standard. For some of these people, all 3,000 questions in the item pool still might not be enough to make it "clear" whether they should pass or fail. These are the people who take the maximum number of questions. At that point, the computer disregards the gray zone and simply looks at whether the final competence level, based on every question answered, is above or below passing. If you are above it, you pass. If not, you do not pass.


"
hope this helps ..... good luck...
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