I could not find my other thread so..

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I took the NCLEX Friday the 13th and found out I passed it on Sunday. Personally, I thought the exam was a lot easier than the HESI we had. I had 75 questions and they got more and more strange. It seemed like just when the questions could not get any more ambiguous, I would get a fairly easy one in another subject. It would then get harder from there...and so on. If I were to give advice on how to study, I would say to study priority questions. To be honest, I used the same technique that I used to pass my EMT test (that I took a year and a half after I completed the course). I just used ABCs and Maslows. I do not think that you can go wrong with that approach, and I know that I am not the the only one to say this. I will say that I did thousands of questions in preparation for my HESI exam (which was about a month before my NCLEX). I hope this helps someone.

I took the NCLEX Friday the 13th and found out I passed it on Sunday. Personally, I thought the exam was a lot easier than the HESI we had. I had 75 questions and they got more and more strange. It seemed like just when the questions could not get any more ambiguous, I would get a fairly easy one in another subject. It would then get harder from there...and so on. If I were to give advice on how to study, I would say to study priority questions. To be honest, I used the same technique that I used to pass my EMT test (that I took a year and a half after I completed the course). I just used ABCs and Maslows. I do not think that you can go wrong with that approach, and I know that I am not the the only one to say this. I will say that I did thousands of questions in preparation for my HESI exam (which was about a month before my NCLEX). I hope this helps someone.

I took the NCLEX Friday the 13th and found out I passed it on Sunday. Personally, I thought the exam was a lot easier than the HESI we had. I had 75 questions and they got more and more strange. It seemed like just when the questions could not get any more ambiguous, I would get a fairly easy one in another subject. It would then get harder from there...and so on. If I were to give advice on how to study, I would say to study priority questions. To be honest, I used the same technique that I used to pass my EMT test (that I took a year and a half after I completed the course). I just used ABCs and Maslows. I do not think that you can go wrong with that approach, and I know that I am not the the only one to say this. I will say that I did thousands of questions in preparation for my HESI exam (which was about a month before my NCLEX). I hope this helps someone.

I took the NCLEX Friday the 13th and found out I passed it on Sunday. Personally, I thought the exam was a lot easier than the HESI we had. I had 75 questions and they got more and more strange. It seemed like just when the questions could not get any more ambiguous, I would get a fairly easy one in another subject. It would then get harder from there...and so on. If I were to give advice on how to study, I would say to study priority questions. To be honest, I used the same technique that I used to pass my EMT test (that I took a year and a half after I completed the course). I just used ABCs and Maslows. I do not think that you can go wrong with that approach, and I know that I am not the the only one to say this. I will say that I did thousands of questions in preparation for my HESI exam (which was about a month before my NCLEX). I hope this helps someone.

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