ANCC FNP exam: My experience

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Today I took and passed the ANCC FNP exam and wanted to share my experience while it is still fresh:

First, although the process of submitting the online application was quite simple, it took 7 weeks to receive confirmation that I could schedule the exam. The reason - the Validation of Education form. My SON sent it electronically in mid-December, and by early February the ANCC told me they still hadn't received it. As it turns out, the SON uses a secure server that (I presume) the ANCC can't log in to. So my Validation Form was just sitting out in cyberspace for all that time waiting for someone to open it. I finally had the SON send it to me, logged on to the secure server myself, downloaded the form, and sent it to the ANCC. Less than an hour later I received authorization to schedule! Very frustrating and disappointing to have waited so long for that.

Needless to say, I had lots of time to study, using the following sources:

School notes & texts. I studied one system at a time and made powerpoint flash cards of things like "signs" (e.g. Markle's sign), reflexes, etc.

Fitzgerald CDs & book

Leik review book - there are over 600 practice questions in the back, highly recommend (despite a few errors scattered throughout)

FamilyNP prep - purchased 15 practice tests. These practice tests did help a little regarding clinical topics. However, there are a LOT of non-clinical questions such as theory, famous psychologists, NP entrepreneurship, etc. which were simply not reflective of the types of non-clinical questions that were actually on the exam. This led me down the path of studying nursing theories (Leininger, family stress, family dynamic, transcultural, blah blah blah) plus psych stuff like Erikson, Freud, Piaget....none of this stuff was relevant. Additionally, there were supposed to be all unique questions, but I had LOTS of repeats. Overall, the time (& money) I spent on these practice tests would have been better spent studying other sources.

Test day:

I don't know about anyone else, but I have taken two certification tests at my local testing center and both times there was one person in the room clickety-clacking away typing up War and Peace or something. It is beyond irritating and distracting! The testing centers should really separate the "typers" from the "clickers".

I had about 10 or so photos. The photo questions were application, such as "which of the following would you biopsy" and such.

There were 7-10 multiple answer questions, such as "pick 3" of the following. Some of them were a little challenging in that I knew 2 of the choices easily, but struggled with the third. Unfortunately, you either get the whole question right or the whole question wrong. There were also matching questions and a few "place in the correct order" questions.

There were lots of questions on research. Fitzgerald has a link on her website that is very helpful for this:

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and there is an additional handout for those who purchased the review course. These two Fitzgerald sources alone probably earned me 5 questions on the exam.

Lots of professional/legal questions. I recommend Carolyn Bippert's book and reading the recommended resources on the ANCC website regarding leadership.

There were also lots of cultural questions. I don't know how to study for those. Some of them I knew just from life experience, some I straight up guessed.

After the test, I received a print-out stating that I had passed. No raw score was given, which is probably for the best. After passing the exam, it is still required to go to the ANCC website and request a validation form to be sent to the BON (for ~$300, one would think the ANCC could manage that step automatically).

Last thing:

The exam itself was WAY less clinically-oriented than I expected. They say it's 25% non-clinical, but I bet it's more like 50/50. Of those, the clinical questions were the most straightforward with no rare or unusual conditions or disease states I'd never heard of. Fitzgerald says "common conditions occur commonly" and that is absolutely reflected on the exam. There was very little by way of meds either, with the exception of the very common meds for the very common chronic conditions. On the other hand, in my opinion, many of the non-clinical questions seemed ambiguous and from out of left field.

Or this site....

https://quizlet.com/subject/np/

Let me know...

FNPinNY

Specializes in Labor and Delivery.

How many questions are there on the board?

B

Thanks for sharing your experience on passing the AANP exam. I took the ANCC exam last month and was unsucessful as well. I have also spent a ton buying review materials and prep questions. I took Fitz live review back in May. I would really love to take Leik live review course but non isscheduled until October. I don't want to wait that long.

Thanks

I agree with the 50/50. I was so frustrated with the psychiatric NP certification exam. I really felt all the studying I did from the ANCC book and the Fitzgerald review, was not reflective of the actual exam. Very disappointing!!!!!

Hello all, just passed the ANCC adult/gero primary car NP exam and wanted to post a few things while they are still fresh in my head. First off I took the fitzgerald live review back in december. I then studied for about 6 weeks going through the fitzgerald book as well as all her online material. I then went through the liek book and did all the practice questions in the back. For the answers I got wrong (which was about 40% of the 629 questions) I made flashcards or looked up the material to help me memorize concepts. I also went on Amazon and read through the first 3 chapters of the ANCC FNP prep book as recommended by other people who took the exam (It is free if you look for the kindle "look inside" feature. Oh and just so you know I scored a 73% on the fitzgerald final exam (the mastery score was a 70%). This made me feel somewhat uncomfortable seeing as I hadn't scored that well on the practice tests. The night before the test I reviewed my notes and went over my flash cards. On the day of the exam the first 20-30 questions were hard for me. I remember thinking "ah crap if this is how the test is I'm not gonna pass". I remembered that Dr.Fitzgerald had said that the beginning of the test usually has the harder questions. For me, this was true as after the initial 20-30 questions i did get a little easier. Needless to say I am glad that this part of my life is finally behind me.

Specializes in Gerontology, Oncology, ICU, Med-Surg.

I passed the ANCC FNP exam today. I really hadn't expected to pass since the only studying I did was about 4 hours the weekend before and I've been out of the NP program for almost 5 months. I did buy the ANCC 150 question practice tests and spent my studying time on what I missed...not specific areas but what I could tell I was generally weak on. On the 2 practice exams I scored a 76% and a 58% so I think going over the areas I missed really helped. The test had lots of non-clinical questions and since I did my master's degree 6 years ago, I had to really stop and think about the terms that relate ethics and statistics. It's true that the first half of the test is really hard and the second half is much easier. I took a break half way through and I think that helped me to focus.

Same boat as Snarf.

I passed FNP ANCC without too much studying.

There were way more "soft" skill questions on the exam regarding how to approach patients of different cultures than I expected. It was almost 50% of the exam.

Snarf,

did you find the ANCC practice questions you purchased helpful? I take the exam in 2 days and I'm majorly anxious. I have passed all the ExamPrep practice tests, but I'm wondering if the ANCC ones would better prepare me. Any feedback would be helpful.

Thank you

Congratulations!!! I just passed my ANCC FNP boards a week ago, and I was surprised about how many non-clinical and research questions there were on the exam. I had many skin photos and "pick 3" questions. I love your description of the "Typers" in the exam room, the whole time during the exam I kept thinking I am glad I don't have to type a book. Good luck to all who are preparing for the exam!!!!

My experience: I took AANP twice and ANCC once, THIS time I PASSED the ANCC. I have Hollier, Fitzgerald, Barkley Review and several, tons of reference and study guides! However If I had to do over, I would only do one thing! That is the Leik review online. It was the BEST and worth every penny. If I can offer anyone advice...Take the Leik review. I have been in your shoes and I am so glad it is over and behind me now! If I can be of assistance to anyone. Please do not hesitate to ask. Good Luck and Best Wishes!

Specializes in Gerontology, Oncology, ICU, Med-Surg.

Yes, I did. Kinda expensive for so few questions but it let me know which areas I knew very little about. Thank heavens there was only 1 easy OB question...birthin' babies ain't my thing:)

OK, Here it is:

Which test was better in my humble opinion? ANCC or AANP?

I took both. ANCC was for sure the easier of the two exams...it is longer, yes...Has nursing research and ethics as part of the exam (non-clinical) yes, but the other clinical based questions are much more strait forward. I studied the Leik book for the research part and it pretty much covered 90% of the questions related to this portion. Of course I did not know all of them, but the ones I did not know I guessed based on the concepts of the rest. Understand the distinct differences, and memorize the vernacular 'terms' and you should get a pretty good understanding of that portion needed for ANCC. (At least from my experience)

I never felt 100% while taking this exam, however I did feel like what I have worked so hard for in practice as well as my studying definitely applied to this exam. PASS!!

AANP, had a lot of very complex questions with a few scattered strait forward questions. I felt I had to read them over several times to understand what the question was really asking. It also had a lot of 'left field' questions that were not something that a 'entry level NP' would even know. I studied a lot and I thought to myself, how would anybody know the answer or term being described?!? I have practiced as an NP for over a year as well and......no!! During this exam I felt defeated. This was just my own personal experience. I will say others I know have failed AANP, and passed ANCC.

The clerk at the testing site even said "Most people pass ANCC over the AANP".

Study Materials: Leik book, Fitzgerald on-line course and study book, App for iPhone (based on leik book), and various on-line testing banks. ANCC and AANP both have practice exams for purchase. Conceptual learning is key, however some memorization of 'tables and charts' go a long way as well. God brought the rest home for what I lack..."I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me".

Hope this helps! Best wishes fellow NP,

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