I'm About To Fail NCLEX Need Help With Where To Go From Here

Nursing Students NCLEX

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I graduated a BSN program in May and am taking my first NCLEX attempt in a few days. I'm almost positive I am going to fail it, and I don't feel ready at all. Basically, I've already accepted defeat and am trying to plan for my next attempt. I had originally planned to take it at the end of the month/beginning of August, but my spouse is putting a lot of pressure on me to "just take the thing." Primarily, I feel, because she's annoyed by the amount of time I spend studying (6-8 hours most days, sometimes 10-12). I feel simultaneously frustrated, burnt out, and too anxious to function. The hours I'm putting in are no longer productive. I feel frenzied, unfocused, and get lost in the details of material I'm unlikely to even see on the exam. I'm not sleeping well, eating well, and know I'm not taking great care of myself. On top of that, my current job, which was planning on me being at my new job by now, has moved me to third shift (they already hired my replacement, and only had shifts open overnight when I told them I was pushing back the new job offer until I passed NCLEX) and I am not functioning well at all with the change. The only time I've smiled or laughed in weeks was thinking this morning about how absurd it is that I'm basically wasting $200 and throwing away my new dream-job offer (they just want me to pass it by the end of August) to knowingly walk into an exam I don't stand a chance at like a lamb to slaughter all to satisfy my spouse's hunch that I'm ready.

I don't feel like she understands at all. While I get that she's trying to boost my confidence, she doesn't get (and there is no polite way to tell her) that her opinion on my readiness is completely unqualified -- she isn't a nurse, has never taken the NCLEX, and has no idea how much I don't know or feel confident in. I also get the sense that her insistence on me getting it over with has less to do with her confidence in my competence and more to do with her annoyance that I'd rather study for the exam than weed the garden or go out to eat.

Her perspective is that I'm doing well overall on practice material and was a mostly-A student in nursing school, so I'm ready. Not only am I ready, but she figures that/behaves like I also don't need to do any more studying before the 8th. In fairness to her, I am doing well on them overall: I scored an 84% raw score on my school's ATI Comprehensive Predictor (~99% odds according to them). I've taken three CAT exams on ATI's Board Vitals; Attempt 1 shut off in 75Qs (84th percentile of Hard Band), Attempt 2 shut off in 76Qs (99th percentile of moderate band), Attempt 3 shut off in 75Qs (88th percentile of Hard Band). I've taken multiple (10+) readiness exams on Archer with a "Very High" likelihood of passing and 7-ish CAT exams on Archer that all shut off at 75 and said I passed. I tried the last few days of a friends' UWorld and was scoring in the 70s on the longer quizzes. On Hurst Review, I've taken 3/4 of their Q-simulators. They recommend a 77/125. My scores have been 93, 98, and 101. Finally, I took Kaplan's free test and got a 74% raw score.

My perspective, that she is unwilling or incapable of understanding, is that being an A-student means nothing if you crammed/didn't retain the material and that a raw score or overall performance on practice tests does not save you if you're riding near or performing under the passing standard in any of the client need categories. Getting 85-100% right in Physiological Adaption and Pharmacological/Parenteral Therapies does not help me if I'm bombing it in Basic Care and Comfort or getting a 57% in Safety and Infection Control. Being able to explain mechanisms of action for drugs and pathophysiology of diseases isn't going to save me if I'm missing questions or dead guessing on fundamentals/skills content. Nor is it helpful that I'm very weak in Maternal-Newborn and Peds (especially Growth and Development questions). While I generally score fine (65-75%) in the area, I also do a lot of guessing on prioritization, delegation, and assignment questions and find myself either confused by the rationales or feeling like they're inconsistent with other similar questions I got right either on the same platform or on different q-banks.

The general pattern I see is that I do very well on "easy" questions, overperform relative to peers on "hard" questions, but only hit 50% or so on "moderate" questions in my weak areas. I might miss multiple questions 55-60% of peers get right in a single assessment. My inadequacy really shines through on ordered response questions. I miss nearly every single one of these style questions when I encounter them.

I've got a content problem. Specifically, I have a content problem with a lot of first semester stuff, Maternal-Newborn, and Peds. I was an LPN for quite some time before my BSN program and tested out of Foundations in my BSN program. I'm regretting it sorely now. A lot of this stuff are things I was taught as an LPN and knew at one time. Unfortunately, in my practice as an LPN, I've been largely working as a med pass nurse in assisted living. In my job, I basically just pass pills and respond to emergencies if they arise. We don't touch catheters, start IVs, do NG tubes, trachs, tube feedings, or even do much of any wound care beyond band-aids or placing steri-strips. 

That is where my problem is. Here is what I've been tried to do to correct it:

- Youtube videos (which I find are often inconsistent between content creators)

- Hurst Review (I regret this purchase. I'm sure this is a wonderful content refresher for people who are weak in med-surg. Their specialty content - including OB and Peds - did not impress me much. I think that their q-simulators are too easy/not realistic and on the questions I do miss, I often don't find their rationales helpful in understanding why I got it wrong.)

- ATI review module books. 

None of these materials have been helpful in significantly improving my scores in my weak areas, and I need advice on where to begin with for my next NCLEX attempt. If it is helpful, reading textbooks does not get me very far. I can read them over and over again, highlight, and take notes for hours and feel like I've retained nothing.

If it is helpful, I'm primarily an auditory/visual learner. I learn from listening to somebody explain a concept or watching someone perform a skill and then attempting to re-explain or perform the skill myself in a fraction of the time it takes me to grasp content by reading from a textbook. 

What I'm looking for is reliable visual content/lectures that cover Foundations material basically from the brand-spanking-new student point. 

Specializes in NICU.

Congrats. 75 questions is the magic number. Either you did very well and passed or you did extremely poorly and failed. The grades you achieved in school, scores on your prep tests, and the amount of studying you put in would indicate that you passed.

It would be very hard to believe that you did so poorly that the computer chose not to give you any more questions beyond 75.

Good job!!

Specializes in Emergency.

After my NCLEX I didn't try the magic pop up thing, I just went to the state BON and licensing website and put in my name. The day after NCLEX my name was listed with a RN number after it.

 

Specializes in Long Term Care.

I wish it were that quick in my neck of the woods. I come from a state where nothing, particularly administrative and regulatory bodies, moves quickly. From my classmates' experiences, it's been taking weeks for their licenses to post. 

Specializes in oncology.

I am always amazed that test takers take the time to COUNT the SATA questions....doesn't that break your concentration?

Specializes in NICU.
1 hour ago, londonflo said:

I am always amazed that test takers take the time to COUNT the SATA questions....doesn't that break your concentration?

I had a good understanding of the algorithm of NCLEX. I knew I was doing well when I get a multiple choice (correct answer), then an SATA (wrong answer), alternating between multiple choice and SATA until it stopped at 75.

I didn't need to count SATAs

Specializes in oncology.
2 hours ago, NICU Guy said:

I didn't need to count SATAs

That is what I mean. So many NCLEX takers come on here and say how many SATAs they got.  Do they tick them off on their scratch pad? I was so immersed when I took 'boards' I really didn't think of anything else except 'what is the next question going to ask'? Of course that was 50 years ago but even when I fool around on CAT practice tests now....I don't count SATAs. 

Congratulations on graduating nursing school, it's a huge feat!  From reading your post, I can see why you are exhausted, anxious, and not retaining what you are reviewing -- you are studying way too many hours!  When I graduated I thought I had to study all day also, but then I read somewhere that it isn't necessary and that light review will suffice.  I recommend one to two hours a day if you can.  If you skip some days you will be fine. 

I was so exhausted and traumatized from nursing school I could barely review for an hour.  I recommend UWorld, it's an excellent study tool.  You have all the information in your head, be gentle with yourself and review in chunks instead of long stretches.  You got this!

Specializes in Hospice/Palliative Care, Critical care, Burns.

I completed an LPN to ADN program and successfully sat for the RN NCLEX on 7/6. I passed in 75 questions:

My strategy:

1) Archer review, average of 300 questions/daily

2) I purchased and read Michael Reid's CliffsNotes NCLEX-RN Cram Plan: Illustrated Edition (available at Amazon for $22) and read it through twice

3) I watched nearly all of LevelUPRN's videos on Youtube (Pro tip: change the playback speed to 1.5x so they go more quickly.)

Specializes in oncology.

ummmm. just really apply yourself in nursing classes. We (professors) know and keep abreast of what is asked on NCLEX. Start day 1 (Foundations/Fundamentals) with your learning for NCLEX.

I see a lot of anxiety in your post. Is this normal for you? Were you like this while getting your other degrees? Maybe look at this as a good learning experience and realize that you have limitations and to schedule yourself and your life with more kindness. A red flag for me was “while growing up” you are an adult now and only you can choose who you want to be. If you are thinking that you’re a failure then even if you pass, you will still see yourself as a failure. 40 yr RN here and my family background is alcoholism, mental illness and physical and mental abuse. Get some help and be who YOU want yourself to be. Good luck ❤️❤️❤️

Specializes in Long Term Care.
7 hours ago, jobellestarr said:

I see a lot of anxiety in your post. Is this normal for you? Were you like this while getting your other degrees? Maybe look at this as a good learning experience and realize that you have limitations and to schedule yourself and your life with more kindness. A red flag for me was “while growing up” you are an adult now and only you can choose who you want to be. If you are thinking that you’re a failure then even if you pass, you will still see yourself as a failure. 40 yr RN here and my family background is alcoholism, mental illness and physical and mental abuse. Get some help and be who YOU want yourself to be. Good luck ❤️❤️❤️

I passed.

I've always had test anxiety, but nothing like it was during nursing school. I think a big difference this time around is that the stakes felt higher. I've got mouths to feed, an uncomfortable amount of student loan debt, and I'm probably 5 years behind the curve on retirement savings. 

The experience has definitely brought issues to a head that I need to address. You're not wrong. I'm very aware of how ridiculous it is that I've been out of my parents' house for years and continue to judge myself using a warped exceptional vs. worthless binary. I don't like feeling like everything is a competition with winners and losers. I've avoided dealing with it for so long because, up until recently, it hadn't seriously impeded my day-to-day functioning. 

 

Yeah, nursing school is really good at being out the worst of us. I’m glad to hear you passed. One step at a time. Be kind to yourself and put yourself first always. That’s the only way you can survive nursing. 

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