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!

I just took the NCLEX on Friday and eleven of my 75 questions were Select all that apply. It was awful. I was told in nursing school that we only have two or three and I got eleven.

Specializes in Operating Room.
bellinaocchi said:
I just took the NCLEX on Friday and eleven of my 75 questions were Select all that apply. It was awful. I was told in nursing school that we only have two or three and I got eleven.

Maybe some of the 11 were some that didn't count. ?????

Hope you found out you passed,

Specializes in Operating Room.
sagarcia210 said:
Does it make a difference if you "know" that the last question you answered on the NCLEX was right or wrong?

Does anyone know the answer to this question?

I am taking my boards next tuesday.I have studied like a mad woman but still scared.I finished the Kaplan online review and keep getting 70 to 79 %.Does anybody know if this is a good score to take the test?please help

DyeRN said:
I am taking my boards next tuesday.I have studied like a mad woman but still scared.I finished the Kaplan online review and keep getting 70 to 79 %.Does anybody know if this is a good score to take the test?please help

70-79 is VERY good. Kaplan says if you get 62.3-70% of their questions right you will be in good shape to take the NCLEX. I know 70-79% sounds kinda borderline, but for Kaplan that is good.

? I took the RN test last month and found it became vry very hard. I got 3 calculate questions (fill out) and 2 questions have 2 or 3 answers. I used Mosby books but it did not help me this time. Most priority questions were give 4 different conditions patients, it seems like they are not in urge situation. Also, I met a question about chiropractic.....never read about it. I was really shocked By those difficult questions. I think the board has changed the way of the test.

Other 2 friends took the test the same time with me were met such hard test like mine. All of us took 75 items. I'll change the way to prepare for the RN next time.

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.

Please if you don't mind can you help me? I'm an LVN student in TX and I have heard that our NCLEX test has changed from multiple choice to fill in the blank and diagrams that have to be labeled since the board have combined and i'm scared to death. I don't know what to expect or what to study.

Specializes in Public Health, DEI.

Very interesting. I took my boards back in the day when they were boards, plural, and you could just retake those sections of the test that you didn't pass. Paper and pencil, 2 day affairs. Then it took six weeks to find out whether you had passed or failed! I enjoy reading the posts from the new grads who are just starting out.

Hi Catherine,

I read your e-mail and it seems that you know a lot about this awful exam.I am a RN educated outside US who wants to pass the NCLEX exam. Could you please help me in my process? I graduated in 2001 and I haven't practiced nursing.So basically I have to start from the beggining (especially that my nursing program is so diffrent from the US programs). I will need a list of books which will help me to prepare myself for tis exam.

Could you please help me?

Cristian Dan

cristicdc said:
Hi Catherine,

I read your e-mail and it seems that you know a lot about this awful exam.I am a RN educated outside US who wants to pass the NCLEX exam. Could you please help me in my process? I graduated in 2001 and I haven't practiced nursing.So basically I have to start from the beggining (especially that my nursing program is so diffrent from the US programs). I will need a list of books which will help me to prepare myself for tis exam.

Could you please help me?

Cristian Dan

Please take a look under the International section. I think that you will find quite a bit of useful information for you to use.

For all of my international students I highly recommend the Saunder's review book. I have had excellent results with them using this..............

Specializes in SNF-LTC; Gero-psych.

Can you answer a question for me??? Is the kaplan Review something you have to purchase or is online Free.. If so where do i get the link...??

The online review i have right now is Lippincott's review for the NCLEX-PN

Specializes in Operating Room.
ocb_dave_ocb said:
Can you answer a question for me??? Is the kaplan Review something you have to purchase or is online Free.. If so where do i get the link...??

The online review i have right now is Lippincott's review for the NCLEX-PN

I'm pretty sure you have to purchase it, although there is a SMALL practice test available. http://www.kaptest.com.

Kaplan may also have another website, maybe someone could add to this.