HELP! Failed NCLEX-RN 6 times!

Nursing Students NCLEX

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I have been out of school 2 years today. I tested yesterday for NCLEX-RN for the 6th time and looked on the licensing website this morning and my name had dropped off indicating that I failed. I am devastated. I am always so confident when I sit down. Then as the test goes on I get anxious and nervous. I have answered all 265 questions 6 TIMES!! I am so close to passing that it just makes me so sick! To think of all the $$ wasted.

What else can I do? AM I meant to do this? I have completed the HURST review, the Kaplan review, the VATI (virtual ATI), worked with a private tutor and plus have used some other study materials. I even went as far as to go to the doctor and request a small dose ant-anxiety medication. However, now I am pregnant and cannot take this.

Anyway, I feel lost, want to quit, and just go into retail. I feel like a huge failure and embarrassment.

Oh, not to mention that I have had to go in front of the nursing board twice now. Each time I've gone in front of them they don't exactly boost my confidence. It's always something like, "If you don't pass this time, well I don't know what we'll do." Or "It gets harder every time you test, it's also hard to get the opportunity to test every time you don't pass." Really? Do they have to be like that? I'm already a nervous wreck.

Any help? Suggestions? Advice? :down:

I recommend just applying for a different state and getting your license switched over georgia is a good state to apply for

Specializes in Complex pedi to LTC/SA & now a manager.
I recommend just applying for a different state and getting your license switched over georgia is a good state to apply for

How will that help the issue? The NCLEX is the same in all 50 states. Plus you must disclose that you had previous failed attempts at the NCLEX when applying for licensing by examination in another state. In addition not all states have the same minimum clinical & theory hour requirements. Quite a few members have had difficulty applying for licensing by examination or endorsement in GA because the minimum theory & clinical hours in their state of education was less than the minimum required by GA BoN

How will that help the issue? The NCLEX is the same in all 50 states. Plus you must disclose that you had previous failed attempts at the NCLEX when applying for licensing by examination in another state. In addition not all states have the same minimum clinical & theory hour requirements. Quite a few members have had difficulty applying for licensing by examination or endorsement in GA because the minimum theory & clinical hours in their state of education was less than the minimum required by GA BoN

What if you just want a reciprocal license? Then do the clinical hours not matter because you're already a nurse?

Specializes in Hospice.

I believe in God and the power of prayer, that being said, all of us Christians know that God does answer prayers and it is not always the answer we want or are praying for. Maybe God has a different path for the OP, we don't get to see the "big picture".

DING! That's my popcorn I'll be back.

Specializes in Adult Internal Medicine.
I believe in God and the power of prayer that being said, all of us Christians know that God does answer prayers and it is not always the answer we want or are praying for. Maybe God has a different path for the OP, we don't get to see the "big picture". DING! That's my popcorn I'll be back.[/quote']

This.

I don't know too many devout religious people that count on divine intervention in passing a test.

Specializes in CEN, CFRN, PHRN, RCIS, EMT-P.
I believe in God and the power of prayer that being said, all of us Christians know that God does answer prayers and it is not always the answer we want or are praying for. Maybe God has a different path for the OP, we don't get to see the "big picture". DING! That's my popcorn I'll be back.[/quote']

http://www.nbcnews.com/id/12082681/

Enough said

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.
Within the Christian tradition, God would be expected to be concerned with a person's eternal salvation, he said, and "why would God change his plans for a particular person just because they're in a research study?"

This part makes the most sense to me.

I recommend just applying for a different state and getting your license switched over georgia is a good state to apply for

How can this work when she doesn't have a license? My understanding is NCLEX is the same for each state but each BON is different. Some make you take refresher courses if you fail after X amount of times but it's the same NCLEX for all 50 states.

Sent from my iPhone using allnurses.com

Specializes in CEN, CFRN, PHRN, RCIS, EMT-P.

A popular apologetic is that God answers prayers in three ways: Yes, no, and wait

Another popular apologetic is that they ways in which God answers prayers, and which prayers he even answers, happens to be "mysterious".

The first popular apologetic is nonsense, if you think about it. It necessarily means that 100% of prayers are answered. It would also necessarily mean that my melted spatula answers 100% of prayers directed at it, too. I'm not sure if maybe this makes the trinity a quadrinitry or if my spatula is just also omnipotent and answering prayers, or what, but it certainly isn't a very good apologetic if you think about it for more than 2 seconds in total.

The second popular apologetic is also nonsense. I can make the same claim for my melted spatula, and it works just as well. Heck, if you want to claim my spatula couldn't answer prayers if it tried, I can just claim it's a mysterious spatula and you can't know what it can, can't, will, or won't, do. The second popular apologetic is mainly good as a rationalization for intelligent questions like "Why would God answer prayers to win a football game (especially ironic as people are praying for *both* teams to win, but no one ever counts the other team loosing as a strike against prayer), but not answering the prayers of say, a child starving to death in Africa. Surely, if you were an omnipotent and all loving entity, you might prioritize minimizing needless suffering and death, right? Well, not if you're "mysterious" in some way, thus allowing you to therefore violate your supposed character without having to take any of the flak for it.

Obviously, lack of an answer to a prayer doesn't necessarily mean God doesn't exist. Maybe he does, and doesn't care. Or maybe he does and doesn't have the power to answer it. In the same way, a prayer seemingly being answered isn't evidence for God either. Praying to find your car keys, and then finding them, doesn't mean your prayer was answered.

To really test prayer, you need to determine the probability of success/failure of the outcome without any kind of supernatural intervention being involved, and then have people prey. If the result is significantly different the expect outcomes, prayer conclusively does *something*. Not poof of a God, but at least something. One thing that *can* be said based on studies on prayer efficacy, is that it definitely doesn't have any effect, positive or negative, on people with diseases, providing one controls for the relevant variables that need to be controlled for for a valid study and has a sufficiently large sample size. So maybe God just cares more about finding car keys than he does about a mother of three with cancer, or maybe he just doesn't exist. There's no way to tell based on that data.

However, *if* it is a definitional attribute of a deity that they will answer prayers under a specific condition, that condition is met, and the prayers are not answered... That's evidence the deity doesn't exist.

Of course, you don't need evidence of something *not existing* to merely lack a belief in it. You don't believe in mice made of dark matter living deep under the surface of mars, do you? No, no you don't, and you have no evidence one way or the other for them.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
I believe in God and the power of prayer that being said, all of us Christians know that God does answer prayers and it is not always the answer we want or are praying for. Maybe God has a different path for the OP, we don't get to see the "big picture". DING! That's my popcorn I'll be back.[/quote']

Agreed.

*Munching away*

Specializes in Complex pedi to LTC/SA & now a manager.
What if you just want a reciprocal license? Then do the clinical hours not matter because you're already a nurse?

Depends you must have minimum work (500 or 1000 hours paid work as a nurse ) as a licensed nurse in your original state of licensing before you can endorse in GA.

Specializes in Complex pedi to LTC/SA & now a manager.
I recommend just applying for a different state and getting your license switched over georgia is a good state to apply for

Plus she is already 2 years out. GA BoN requires candidates to pass within 3 years of nursing school graduation date, assuming her education meets GABoN requirements.

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