Published Aug 11, 2012
PacoUSA, BSN, RN
3,445 Posts
My NCLEX date is fast approaching, and I have done a respectable number of questions over the last couple of months (I was keeping track but I just stopped out of sheer laziness) -- I would estimate I have done at least 2,500 and I am bound to do another 1,000 at least before it is all said and done. However, I am feeling like doing questions is not enough. I am reading the rationales for all the questions I get wrong, so I am learning that way. But on some level I feel tempted to read outlines, then figure that there is no guarantee that what I specifically study will be tested on my NCLEX. Not sure if what I am doing is enough.
Thoughts?
JamieJCST
38 Posts
I answered 50 Kaplan Qbank questions almost everyday. I read most of the rationales for all the questions. I took my NCLEX last Monday and passed with 75 questions.Good luck!
oztizz184
369 Posts
i studied content and questions and passed
but a lot of my classmates only did questions and passed
everyone studies differently, but either way works :)
European
107 Posts
Historically 85% of applicants pass NCLEX at the first time. so just think about the time in nursing school, would you put yourself in that 85% slot of people who do better or in the 15% of people who struggle? I felt NCLEX was so random that all the questions in the world will help you for maybe 20% of the whole exam and the rest is reasoning that you have to do on the spot. That's how I felt about the NCLEX.
SENSUALBLISSINFL, BSN, RN
410 Posts
I agree. My exam was so random, I felt like "where is this question coming from"?. You appear to be prepared, I hope that as of your post that you have already scheduled your exam. I wished I had taken the boards as soon as I graduated based on the exam I got. Yes, there are some basics of course that you must go in with, but like the Nike commercial says, JUST DO IT!!!!
NurseCJV
47 Posts
I felt like Kaplan really helped me familiarize myself with the wording and types of questions of the NCLEX exam. I studied a lot of content but I felt like doing the Kaplan Qbanks and the Questions trainers 1-7 really put everything together. There are a lot of resources out there and a lot of questions to do but the main thing is the quality of questions you are doing and what level of difficulty the questions are according to Bloom's Taxonomy (passing level Questions in the NCLEX). The majority of Kaplan Q's are passing level questions.
In the end, passing level questions are all that matter AND as graduate nurses we are all going to get there! All we need to do is to tell the computer that we are competent enough that we can stay at the passing level. This doesn't mean you have to get them all right but you must be able to maintain and stay above the passing level and create a pattern so that the computer reaches a set percent of certainty.
Yes content is important and it is preferred to brush up on weak content areas but A LOT of the content questions (failing questions on the NCLEX) can be answered by recalling what you learned in Nursing school. I'm not sure if I make sense, sometimes I just blabber.
R. Obias Jr., R.N.
45 Posts
I once had a 5 inch thick nursing book when I was still in my nursing studies and not a single question was taken from it,imagine that, best way to study is to read and analyze all the correct rationales from your questionaires , know them by heart so when the question comes to you , no matter how the question was asked or formed, you will definitely know the answer. Most exam takers memorize or remember the question that they studied, scramble the form of that question they forget the answer.Relax during your exams and everything you have learned will come to your mind when needed, Good Luck!
Thanks for the inspiration, everyone! :hug: I just can't wait to get this exam past me in 2 weeks :) I will be sure to let you all know how it goes.
MrsV
26 Posts
I am taking my NCLEX-PN on Saturday and that is basically all I have been doing is questions. I'd say probably 100-150 a day and getting roughly a 70-80% on them. If I come across something I am not sure of, I add it to my list of things to study out of the book. This is how I studied for my Hesi Exit too and passed 1st try. I also have flash cards for drugs, lab values, etc.
Good Luck!!
starNOstar
145 Posts
Good luck dude! I have the same question
ashley024
14 Posts
I agree it's more about applying everything you leave learned not so much black and white facts.
iheartNICU89
48 Posts
Is kaplan qbank worth the money?