NCLEX Number of Questions and Clarification

ALL STUDENTS PLEASE READ. I teach a semester long course to prep our grads for NCLEX. Please read this entire post carefully. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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The NCLEX adapts to your skill level. The first questions that are presented are determining your ability level. Once that ability level is determined, the questions are presented in increasing level of difficulty/decreasing difficulty until you have answered enough questions for the computer to determine (with 95% statistical certainty) that you have met the passing standard.

The minimum number of questions you will have is 75 (60 questions plus 15 pilot items). You will not be able to distinguish pilot items from "real" items. SO, if you get 265 items, that means the computer has not yet determined that you have met the passing standard at the 95% confidence level. There is no random number of candidates that get the exam with 265 questions- that is a myth.

You will not be able to tell whether you have passed by the number of questions you get!

The test is 6 hours long, and you should take your time. You have paid $200 for that test seat- USE IT!

Rushing through the questions or rapid guessing will most likely lead to failure, because each one you get wrong due to guessing means the next question is easier, and then on and on, until you fail because you are guessing at them all. Take your time to think each question through.

You will not leave the exam feeling good- the test challenges every bit of you, so you will feel tired and unsure of yourself. The way you feel does not equate into passing or failing. You cannot judge. Wait for your results.

NCLEX is given throughout the US and its territories, so the same format is used and the same question bank is used across the US. You do not have to take the exam in the same state where you are applying for licensure.

These are some resources for NCLEX prep that I like (no monetary incentive for sharing).

NCSBN's Review:

Kaplan

I am impressed with the strategy that is taught in the Kaplan course.

Lastly, you must manage anxiety. Pay attention to strategies to reduce anxiety. Approach each question as a new patient- one at a time, and focus completely on that question (patient).

Do not get distracted by thoughts of passing or failing, or by focusing on the number of questions you have had. Just keep going, one at a time, until the test ends. Then- be good to yourself while you wait for results. Remember you will not be able to accurately judge whether you passed by the way you feel. The test challenges you and you will not feel great when it is over.

Best wishes for success!

Specializes in Labor & Delivery.

hello...this thread is very informative...thanks Catherine for addressing the common NCLEX questions/myths and everyone else contributing to this thread....it is helpful

I live in Canada and will be writing my NCLEX shortly on jan 20...there is a mention about the HESI test that predicts your NCLEX success and I would like to know more about it, and how if possible, can i take this test? Do you have to pay for it and is it available online? :rolleyes:

thanks!!!

Specializes in Mental Health, & Internal Mmed.

:nurse: I have to take the HESI tomorrow...we have to score 850 also in order to be able to graduate and for them to sign off on our application to take the NCLEX. I have talked to a lot of people who just recently took the HESI and they said that there is a lot of oncology, prioritizing, and med surg on there, does anyone else who has taken it agree?

Thanks!:uhoh3:

I had to take the HESI each semester in nursing school and I have to say the questions were different then the NCLEX. I felt that the HESI asked more specific questions and knowledge recall, whereas the NCLEX was more prioritizing. But, regardless I feel like sitting and doing questions on the computer helped me prepare for the NCLEX b/c I wasn't really nervous for the NCLEX, I felt like I was just doing more Hesi questions or study questions- and I was always able to narrow it down to two answers and luckily it shut off at 75- and I passed.

Specializes in Psychiatric Adolescent.

Hey, everybody! I just discovered this website today and am not quite sure how to post and where to post if I have a specific thing on my mind, BUT, I jsut took my NCLEX-RN exam yesterday in Springfield, MA. :uhoh3: Does anyone know how long it takes to know the results? It shut off at 75 questions and I know that is either very, very good...or very, very, very bad :uhoh3:

cjmmsn98 said:
Hope you all do not mind- I teach a NCLEX coaching course at the BSN level, and felt like I wanted to tell you about the # of questions you get and what that actually means.

The NCLEX adapts to your skill level. The first questions that are presented to you are determining your ability level. Once your ability level is determined, the questions are presented in increasing level of difficulty/decreasing difficulty until you have answered enough questions for the computer to determine (with 95% statistical certainty) that you have met the passing standard.

The minimum number of questions you will have is 75 (60 questions plus 15 pilot items). You will not be able to distibguish pilot items from "real" items. SO, if you get 265 items, that means the computer has not yet determined that you have met the passing standard at the 95% confidence level. There is no random number of candidates that get the exam with 265- that is a myth.

The test is now 6 hours long, and you should take your time. Rushingthrough the questions will most likely lead to failure, because each one you get wrong due to guessing means the next question is easier, and then on and on, until you fail because you are guessing at them all. Take your time to think each question through and choose the best answer.

If you visit http://wwww.ncsbn.org you will find the explanation of CAT and scoring.

NCLEX is given throughout the US and its territoiries, so the same format is used and the same question bank is used across the US.

ANd I have a question for those of you that have recently taken the NCLEX-

about how many alternate format items did you get, and what type were they? Please email me privately, and thanks!

Catherine M., MS, RN, NCSN,AE-C:specs:

This is very helpful information. I will be graduating in May and I've started reviewing NCLEX test books. Do you recommend any specific ones?

medicineman2004 said:
Hey, everybody! I just discovered this website today and am not quite sure how to post and where to post if I have a specific thing on my mind, BUT, I jsut took my NCLEX-RN exam yesterday in Springfield, MA. :uhoh3: Does anyone know how long it takes to know the results? It shut off at 75 questions and I know that is either very, very good...or very, very, very bad :uhoh3:

I took the NCLEX PN & looked online 2 days later & my results were there. I had 85 questions (minimum for PN).. a lot of the people I know had that amount & passed.. good luck to you!

Specializes in Psychiatric Adolescent.

OK, it was apparently very, very good...I PASSED!!!

I found out two days later. But on the third day (Friday), it was on the Mass.StateBoard of Nursing website though...or free :imbar

RainbowzLPN said:
I took the NCLEX PN & looked online 2 days later & my results were there. I had 85 questions (minimum for PN).. a lot of the people I know had that amount & passed.. good luck to you!
medicineman2004 said:
OK, it was apparently very, very good...I PASSED!!!

I found out two days later. But on the third day (Friday), it was on the Mass.StateBoard of Nursing website though...or free :imbar

Congrats!!! :balloons: ? Welcome to the profession!

Specializes in Bone Marrow Transplant.

Thanks Catherine for the info! It was very helpful. I'm thinking about taking NCLEX on the week of January 10th. I'm not nervous, but that doesn't mean that I'm not going to be:uhoh3: . I figured that since I can't study everything, I might as well focus on how to answer the questions. I took the Sylvia Rayfield course and I plan on reading Kaplan which has been very helpful so far. Does anyone else have any other suggestions on what material to study? I start working with my temp license on january 18th, and i want my permanent license by the time I got to work. In Louisiana, I can check my results in 48 hours.

BSN2004NSU

Specializes in OB, M/S, HH, Medical Imaging RN.

I was told by my state BON that 1 out of every 100 candidates will take 265 questions. The reason is that 60 questions is a very small amount of questions to judge if you should pass boards. The information from those who take 265 questions is used to determine if the same candidate would have passed at 60 (75) as well as at 265. It makes perfect sense to me. My state is in the process of changing the NCLEX.

RN1976Nurse said:
I was told by my state BON that 1 out of every 100 candidates will take 265 questions. The reason is that 60 questions is a very small amount of questions to judge if you should pass boards. The information from those who take 265 questions is used to determine if the same candidate would have passed at 60 (75) as well as at 265. It makes perfect sense to me. My state is in the process of changing the NCLEX.

Your state can't make any changes to the NCLEX exam, it is a national exam, given throughout the world. The state BON has no control over the exam. They get just that you passed or didn't pass from Pearson-Vue, same as you do.

Specializes in LTC/Peds/ICU/PACU/CDI.
rn1976nurse said:
I was told by my state bon that 1 out of every 100 candidates will take 265 questions. The reason is that 60 questions is a very small amount of questions to judge if you should pass boards. The information from those who take 265 questions is used to determine if the same candidate would have passed at 60 (75) as well as at 265. It makes perfect sense to me. My state is in the process of changing the nclex.

Unfortunately...if someone from your sbon told you that, then they're certainly uninformed! If that were the case, then they (your sbon) would have every candidate take the maximum amount of questions. The whole idea is to see if the candidate will be a safe practicing novice that will someday become an expert. The sbon knows that students won't know or understand everything taught to them, but they should be able to at least safely critically reason their way. Some make it because they've learned & understand the minimum competency...others learn how to take the exam...some do poorly because of anxiety...& yet some just don't understand or get it. It's what you do with the knowledge learned...how one would apply it...that's what the nclex is about. If 60 question isn't enough to gage one's competency level....then there are way too many new nurses out there!

The nclex-pn/rn is designed to shut off once a candidate has answered 50% of the competency level questions either above or below passing standard...period. The test will give the candidate who titters at the minimum passing line a chance to prove they either know the material or not...in which case...it could go on from 86-200 (nclex-pn) or 76-265 (nclex-rn). The key is answering strings of passing level questions in a row or just being consistently above the passing competency level & the computer will shut off & pass the candidate, providing they answered that 50% minimum above passing. If said candidate consistently answered questions below the minimum competency levels, then the machine will shut off & that person will fail.

The other scenario is running out of time while taking exam: how one end the test will determine if one passes. This is the most difficult way to pass, mind you...but possible. Should the candidate run out of time before the exam is finished, then the computer will look at how said person answered their last 60 questions. They would have to have all the last 60 answered correctly...whether being above, at, or below the passing standard. That means that individual could literally answer the last question & it is a comprehensive or recall type question (which is the kind most nsg students are accustomed to in their junior & sometimes senior year that are not considered critical thinking or competency type questions). This type will count in that event despite it being well below passing level...doesn't matter.

The number the machine shut off on has no baring as to whether or not the candidate passed or not (with the exception of running out of time as explained above). One can literally have the machine shut off at 85 (nclex-pn)/ 75 (nclex-rn) & fail...just like one could go the whole max 200 (nclex-pn) 265 (nclex-rn) & still pass. The same for when the machine shuts off anywhere in-between 86-200 (nclex-pn) & 76-265 (nclex-rn).

The other stuff you were told by the person from your sbon was simply a rumor they've picked-up from someone they thought knew what they were talking about.

Cheers!