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hi everyone! i'm holli. i took boards on june 13th and passed with 75 questions. i am starting work on july 18th at the only hospital i ever wanted to work for. it is a great pediatric facility! i will be on the (post-op) surgical floor, and we also have all of the endocrine kids. also, they just added an epilepsy monitoring unit, for overnight monitoring and for the brain mapping they are doing. i expressed an interest in that, so they will cross-train me in that unit as well. i can't wait to get started!
so, tell me about you...
holli, rn
Hi,
LPN's have a total of 85 min to pass, RN's total of 75 to pass.
When I took the NCLEX RN there were 15 experimental questions that do not count, so actually there is only a minimum of 6o to pass!
It is unlike any test you took in school, because if you miss one question, it will give you a harder question.
EX: If you answer a question wrong and it gives you a easy question, then a harder question, then you answer it wrong it gives you an easy question again. If you keep doing this , the computer will keep giving you questions until you start answering the higher level questions right.
When you finally answer enough higher level questions and the computer decides the number is adaquate then it shuts off.
It may shut off at 75,100, or 263 depending on the percentage of higher level questions you answer.
Many test takers will note that the questions are hard, and require you think them through, using critical thinking you learned in school.
Some time there may be a question that you have thought through and just cannot come up with an answer, pick the best one and move on.
More people pass than fail, so keep that in mind.
A majority of the nurses I have talked to thought they flunked it, the first time,but passed it.
Also a few that thought they did well, flunked it.
The best advise is to study as many questions and know the rationals.
I was told 3000 questions.
Do 100 questions a day 50 the first part of the day, another 50 the 2nd part of the day. Do not do more than 100, you will not absorb the info.
That is my advise to you...
Good Luck, and work hard.
(
Hi, just a quick question, I am reading all these threads andyou passed with either 105, 75 or 8o question, is your test stopped when you passed a certain amount of questions, how many question are on the test. Also are you allowed to work as a nurse before you pass your NYCLEX, please dont think these are dumb questions.
Oh,
Sorry the other question you were asking was are you allowed to work as a nurse before NCLEX.
I only know, you can work as a GN graduate nurse, before you can work as a full fleldged nurse.
There is a specific time frame( be able to prove you will be taking NCLEX, and proof of school you graduated from).
If you do not pass test first time, must work as a tech/aide until you pass.
As GN cannot pass meds on your own, just what you were allowed to do in clinicals.
Hope info helps...
Hi,LPN's have a total of 85 min to pass, RN's total of 75 to pass.
When I took the NCLEX RN there were 15 experimental questions that do not count, so actually there is only a minimum of 6o to pass!
It is unlike any test you took in school, because if you miss one question, it will give you a harder question.
EX: If you answer a question wrong and it gives you a easy question, then a harder question, then you answer it wrong it gives you an easy question again. If you keep doing this , the computer will keep giving you questions until you start answering the higher level questions right.
When you finally answer enough higher level questions and the computer decides the number is adaquate then it shuts off.
It may shut off at 75,100, or 263 depending on the percentage of higher level questions you answer.
Many test takers will note that the questions are hard, and require you think them through, using critical thinking you learned in school.
Some time there may be a question that you have thought through and just cannot come up with an answer, pick the best one and move on.
More people pass than fail, so keep that in mind.
A majority of the nurses I have talked to thought they flunked it, the first time,but passed it.
Also a few that thought they did well, flunked it.
The best advise is to study as many questions and know the rationals.
I was told 3000 questions.
Do 100 questions a day 50 the first part of the day, another 50 the 2nd part of the day. Do not do more than 100, you will not absorb the info.
That is my advise to you...
Good Luck, and work hard.
(
greetings y'all, :welcome:
my name is connie and i am from san antonio, tx. i graduated dec. 2006 as a lvn/lpn and my very first career move was with methodist hosp. med/surg. floor on feb. 2007. i can tell you, i had no idea as to what i was about to endure. i had never ever been in a hospital environment except during clinicals. there was a time when i though i wasn't going to make it. but with god's grace and lots of prayers and words of encouragement from my colleges/friends, it has gotten so much better. it does have it's moments of challenges but no impossibilities.
i am so blessed and thankful of my position and the encounters that are placed in front of me from day to day. love what you do and remind yourself of why you are doing it.
blessings to all and rock on.......
[color=#6000bf]~[color=#40007f]connie v., lvn [color=#40007f]guide me as i extend mercy to those in my care. let them see not the "duty" of my job, but rather let them see your love shining through each action and deed..........your nurse
[color=#40007f]
Hi Everyone, my name is David, and I am from San Antonio, TX. I recently graduated in Aug. 07 as a LVN and am currently working at the
Baptist Hospital ED. I have been in the medical field for a very long time as a MA and ED Tech. The change over from Tech to Nurse was challenging, but with the help of my senior nurses and my family I managed to survive. I hope to continue my education in the near,near future.
Hi everyone! I'm Sharon and this is a career change for me. I worked full time doing product development for a pharmaceutical company while going to nursing school and graduated this past August. I passed boards in September. Today I interviewed at Sharp Memorial Hospital for a progressive care unit for post-op transplant patients and was offered a position on the spot! I start in January.
Hi! My name is Christina. I live in Santa Barbara County, California. I have 14 days until I graduate from LVN school and 1 month until I start RN school. I just recently got a job as a student intern at Marian Medical Center in the ED. I hope to learn a lot from this website. I'm extremely excited yet nervous about becoming a nurse. Wish me luck on my finals and state boards! Any tips on becoming a nurse...let me know! Thanks.
Christina
Hey guys! My name is Dustin. A new member here on the boards.
I'm a student pursuing a BSN. Currently in my first year.
I currently practice as a licensed and certified Occupational Therapy Assistant. I am also a Veteran of Iraq as an Army medic (EMT paramedic).
As far as experience, I have done many, many things as a medic in the military. Procedures even most nurses will never get to do in their entire careers. From chest tubes to central lines to ETT placement, all with competency of course!
My focus has always been in nursing, I hope to contribute as well as learn from everyone on the board.
Cheers!
Hello Everyone, I am new here, I am graduating December 12, 2007 as an LPN and starting in January for my prereqs for the RN bridge program my school has started. I currently work as a CMT for a Long Term Care Facility in my county, and will continue to work there once I have passed my boards. I am so excited to have found a site to chat with other nurses and students!
dakotaalrick
11 Posts
what school are you attending, and congrats. This is the reason I decided to go for the LPN first because I finish my prereq and still on the waiting list at BCC.