ANCC-FNP Exam- new test version 4/7/2016- PASS

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Hi,

I haven't seen lots of posts about people taking the new ANCC-FNP exam as of February 2016, so I decided to write one because I know I went looking here for advice and on what to expect several times throughout my process. I just got home and I passed the exam.

So as far as study advice I would say really really really really DO NOT SKIP OR GLOSS OVER epidemiology, all the technical jargon about nursing roles, standards of practice, quality improvement programs, risk management programs, sentinel events, root cause analysis, outcomes analysis, malpractice, CPT, ICD-10, incident to billing.

Learn these definitions so well you can repeat them back including, if applicable, their precise names (International Classification for Diseases, Budget Reconciliation Act). If there are stated steps to the "risk management review process"- know them by name and in order. If you get these type of questions wrong on your practice exams, pay A LOT of attention and review, retest, try to fix. Don't think "ugh, whatever, I know what 'leadership' is"... they will ask it in strange ways.

Really improve your literal test-taking skills at closely reading questions. I am someone who is generally naturally good at this (I had a near perfect score on GRE verbal and I'm a voracious reader), but I actually realized I needed to do work on this. There are many questions where the line between the right answer or wrong are things.

I used lots of things to study over time, Leik is very good for streamlining and making things feel manageable, but there are also mistakes and exclusions and its organized not very well. There were some nights where all that made me pretty aggravated. All that said, I used her a lot. She does talk about professional issues, but you NEED to supplement-- go everywhere looking for supplements on the topics I suggested above, no one source covers it all. Check ANCC's book.

I took Barkley review ages ago, so the live review didn't factor in to my success (but could have), but the book I got from it was very good-- his outline for peds really helped me feel like it was manageable where other books were too bogged down in info. But of course, none of that was on the exam. ?

Fitzgerald is great, but she really lays on surplus info you don't need- she's focused on making great clinicians with her book, not getting people to focus on only passing the exam. But good supplement. I took Fitzgerald's practice online questions (many repeats from book, but some new), I bought Barkley's DRT exams (annoyingly expensive and overthinking it I think), the ANCC practice tests (they only sell 2 which together make up a little less than 1 whole exam), and I took APEA predictor exams the last few days before my exam, which I liked and also boosted my sense of confidence. Really none of these provided the mix I got on my exam, they were all much more clinical, and the test wasn't. But you need to just start testing and getting some sense, so just choose whichever budget wise works for you. But, if you had to only buy two for instance, I would choose two tests from two different sources rather than from one. Just having the experience of doing questions on the computer is valuable.

I also took Fitzgerald's review (again a long time ago) it was very thorough... it had a less relaxed feeling than Barkley's... I felt I liked hers better, but again... they are all focused on clinical...I also have lots of other resources that I didn't use much (Fitzgerald's CD's for instance) and I am happy I didn't use to study in retrospect... although I will for my general knowledge.

So, that's it. Hope it's helpful. I had agonized way past the point of return because I was so nervous about this test.... Oh, also, normally I take tests VERY quickly. On practice exams of 150 questions, I am done in an hour and 15. I needed every minute of 4 hours and 30 minutes on this test. I didn't even get through reviewing all of my marked questions when the computer shut off and I only took one short bathroom/ drink break.

OH and another thing, the computer DID NOT tell me if I passed. I sat there thinking it would given what others have said. And then I thought something went horribly wrong, or I failed. In fact, the proctor outside the room after checking me out, printed out a sheet, silently folded it and then handed it to me. THIS had if I passed or failed on it.

Additionally there were two features available to help you on the exam, which I have never heard anyone mention before. 1. You can strike out answers to help you visualize and cut down on the data. When you go back to a question, your strike outs remain. 2. You can also highlight parts of the question and your highlights remain.

Also everything, but your ID And key to your locked has to be put away, but at my testing center people were allowed to access food and drink they left on top of the lockers. A lady actually told me that I could even go into my locker as long as I didn't check my phone or other prohibited behaviors, so although I left my water and juice out, I left my snack bars in. It turns out my proctor made me leave my key on the desk, so she was misinformed. But I had access to my liquids, I would have put out my bar too if I had known. I took the test in NYC- Manhattan at Prometric and I am sure there could be variation between centers, but just putting it out there....

Good luck!

Hi urbanrn328! I'm taking my exam in 9 days and I'm hoping you could share your study guide. My email is [email protected]. Thank you. Appreciate it.

Hello. Did urban answered you. I asked couple of times but no reply. Did you receive anything? Thank you

Hi. I know its a bit late but could you send the study guide mentioned to [email protected]? I am really worried about passing. Thanks so much in advance.

hey urbanrn ! If you can email me at [email protected] . I wanted to see how you put together your studyguide ! Thank you!

Hi Urbanrn328, can you please share with me you study guide, i am soon to graduate and really freaking out.

Email is [email protected]. Thank you very much and God Bless.

Hello everyone. Is anyone received a study guide? Please help. Thank you

Congrats Urbanrn! I'm getting ready for boards now! Any chance you'd share your study guide with an incredibly terrified soon to be FNP boards taker!? [email protected] Thank you!

Hi Urban. Can you please share ur study guide with me. Thank you in advance. My email is [email protected]

I passed the ANCC boards today. The clinical questions were straightforward, and not hard at all. The nonclinical questions were a lot but manageable. I was expecting the exam to be very hard based on feedback, and I was stressing out and panicking for days leading up the exam. The night before my exam, I couldn't sleep; tossed and turned all night while watching the clock. I thought I was going to fail because of the lack of sleep but while doing the exam, I began to relax because the questions seemed so straightforward. It was easy to nature it down to two and pick the right answers. While taking the exam I knew I was going to pass. The hardest part was sitting for 4 hours.

I started my review in October - so it took 2 months. I listened to all the Fitzgerald lectures and took notes but didn't really memorize the material because I felt overwhelmed - like it was impossible to remember so much stuff. In the end I got bored with the book. I would glance at a couple chapters like Endocrine, Hematology but I never read through the whole book. I also listened to Barley cd every time I was in my car. I used American Family Physician a lot to look stuff up. I was scared I was going to fail because everyone who passed said that they read the review books cover to cover and I never did that so I felt I didn't know enough content and wasn't ready to pass the Boards. I was going to cancel my test but I also wanted so badly to not have to study another day so I went ahead. Voila, I passed.

I did 90% of the questions in Boards Vitals. Those questions are HARD! And the rationals were amazing! In addition, the nonclinical section had around 500+ questions and I did 400+. My scores were all over the place - 60s+ and improved in the 70s/80s. I also did ExamEdge about 10 (100) questions and was frustrated with those as I got 391 once and remained in the 345 range - failing the 350 for passing. The questions to me were weird, and very specific which was annoying because it was hard to pick the right answers to get a 350 passing score. I continued to do them anyway, and it paid off. In addition, I did as many questions as I could from text books including the new Barkley's blue book - which is awesome with great explanations. I only got through about 5 chapters though as I was limited on time. One week before my exam I did 5 practice sets - 60 questions each from Apea.com and those questions were very helpful especially the rationals. I wasn't able to do the diagnostic 150 exam because I ran out of time. I did the Barkley's diagnostic test the night before the exam and failed with a 69%..., 2 days prior I have done the Fitzgerald 150 comprehensive test and got 80% but it wasn't timed like the Barkley which I was rushing in the end to finish on time. I consistently did a lot of questions daily for at least 2 weeks from different sources, and I believe that is why the exam felt very manageable.

Overall, if anyone out there is scared, feel like you do not know the content very well, a poor test taker who struggled in school and feel overwhelmed, you can pass the exam. Do LOTS of hard questions daily, and understand the rationals. The 3 websites I mentioned above are great - with lots of pictures, and rationals. Look up stuff in the clinical practice guidelines that need further clarification. In the end, the ANCC exam won't seem that hard because the practice questions will help you narrow down the correct answer choices, and familiarize you with content areas you were not able to review on your own.

I just passed my ANCC FNP exam today! Such a relief! I told myself I would post if I passed bc I looked on here so many times for study guidance!

First off, I have been out of practice since I had my son almost 3 years ago and I graduated from my FNP program in May 2015, so if I can pass, so can you! And, last week my wild toddler missed 4 days of preschool bc he was sick and then I got sick... nightmare!

I studied for a total of 3 weeks. About 4 hours a day. Some days less and the last few days before the test about 6-8 hours a day.

I listened to Barkley's CDs in the car but only got through about 3 of the 19 (i don't do too much driving).

I did the practice questions on the ANCC website. I took the FNP exam but also practiced the peds, geriatric, and acute care questions from the ANCC practice questions.

Main study source was Board Vitals. I did aaaalllll 1900 questions! Flagged the ones I didn't know. Read through all the rationales, which are great! Did the flagged ones again and made flash cards. Didn't really study the flashcards but writing them helped me learn. Repeated questions in subject areas I knew were my weak areas and did random tests all the time, reading the rationales as I went. By 3-4 days before the test I was getting in the upper 80s on the tests, but I was also becoming familiar with the questions bc I had done them all before. Also, tons of questions on professional practice and research to help you prep for the almost 50% that isn't clinical!

2 days before the test I took a Barkley DRT. I was not really a fan of the questions and disagreed with the answers. Also got a 66%

2 days before I also did 2 Exam Edge tests and just passed them. They were OK but also didn't like some of the questions and didn't agree with the rationales.

1 Day before I discovered APEA and bought a 3 pack of quizzes. I thought that some of these questions were repeated on the ANCC exam. I really liked these questions and thought they were like the tests. I took a predictor test the night before the exam and got an 81% which gave me confidence. Cons: On the predictor tests you can only review the rationales for the questions you got wrong at the end of the exam and once you are done reviewing the incorrect questions and close the window, you can't go back. For the quizzes, you get the rationales for each question as you answer them but once you move on to the next question you can never go back to the previous questions.

Test- I used the strike out function a lot. Most questions you can definitely eliminate 2 answers right away. Like other people said, it was about 50/50 clinical and research/professional practice. Know asthma and hierarchy of research. The questions that made you select more than one answer said "select 3" or "select 2" which was nice.

Overall, I thought it was worth it to invest in board vitals (i did a month of unlimited) and APEA tests and quizzes!

Could you please help me? Advice? I would love your specific study guide.

I took this ANCC exam twice this year. Did not pass. Please help?

I took the ANCC FNP and almost passed 2015. I retook the exam 2016. Fail. I wasn't even Close I sure could use that guide

please help?

Hi everyone! I must say reading the posts in this thread has given me great encouragement. I am waiting for a date to take the ANCC exam for AGNP. URBANRN328, I too would love to have a copy of your study guide please. If anyone has received the study guide, if they would not mind sharing it too that would be great. I noticed that URBANRN328 is not online when you click their name and haven't noticed any more postings from them either. Please feel free to email me at [email protected] Also, if anyone has recently taken the ANCC exam, whether it is FNP or AGNP, I would love to hear about some of the questions you encountered. Thank you everyone for sharing. As usual, nurses are awesome! Good luck to everyone and thank you again!!

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