NCLEX RN Advice

Preparing for the NCLEX can be a daunting experience. Relax, take a few deep breaths, and envision yourself in your future nursing career. You made it through nursing school and now is your time to shine. Here you will find a raw account of what the test prep was like for me that brought me success! Nursing Students NCLEX Article

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Hi there! I told myself after taking the NCLEX-RN exam that I would come back here (like many have) and discuss my experience, results, etc. because I spent countless evenings and hours on this site looking for comfort throughout my nursing school journey and especially after I graduated waiting to take the NCLEX. I took the NCLEX RN yesterday (1/6/16) at 8:00 am and completed the exam in approximately 1 hour with 75 questions. I will post my results in the morning when I get them. I have done the PVT and gotten "the good pop up" and my state (Texas) BON has not removed my graduate nurse license, which is supposed to be a good sign. My boss said that if you fail, the BON will immediately remove your GN license from the site. Anyways....here is what I did.

I graduated 12/10/15. I got my ATT on 1/16/15. I signed up to take the NCLEX for 1/6/16, giving myself exactly 3 weeks to study.

For the first week, I really got down to business on re-watching my Hurst Review videos. The Hurst has 27 videos total, anywhere from 16 minutes to 1 hour and 24 minutes long.The videos average around 45 minutes. I had already taken the live review the week of graduation with my class (It was mandatory, $300). I had 9 videos left to watch by the time I stopped studying for the NCLEX. (So I did not complete the review all the way through). The Hurst Review online also has 6 practice tests "Q Trainers" that are 125 questions each. I completed all of these before I took the NCLEX.

I purchased the Kaplan-Q Bank for one month. It was $49. I aimed to answer 100-200 questions a day and to review all of the rationales. I bought a spiral notebook and wrote down the rationales to questions I got wrong. I also wrote down unfamiliar topics and looked them up after the fact.

I purchased the LaCharity: Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment book. It is a thin, workbook-style book that Barnes and Noble carries. It was $50. I completed about half of the work book.

After my first week of studying, I went out of town for Christmas to visit family for 2 days. When I came back, it was very hard for me to get back to 8 hour study days. I could not focus on any more videos. I stopped watching videos and decided to just answer as much questions as I could stand every day. I ended up doing about 150-200 questions a day until the day before my test date. Before I took my test I had ended up doing 1,350 questions and reading rationales. (Yes, I added it up). My bestie from nursing school and I got together each day for 3 days before the test. What we did was take 1 Hurst Q-Trainer test (125 questions each) together each day. We took turns reading questions out loud to each other and working through the answers. Then, we would go back and read all of the rationales out loud together also. We both felt like this was extremely helpful. We only disagreed on about 10% of the test. We obviously scored better together, so we subtracted about 10 questions from our final score for accuracy as to where we really stood.

What were my Kaplan Q Bank scores like?

Test 1: 57%
Test 2: 57%
Test 3: 63%
Test 4: 59%
Test 5: 44% (I think I was tired of studying this day
Test 6: 65%
Test 7: 55%
Test 8: 64%

I took 75 question tests in "timed mode" not "tutor mode". I never recycled any questions and I always checked "select all" for content of questions.

What were my Hurst Q Trainer Scores? This is questions correct out of 125. They also give you percentages. I did not feel like going through the trouble of looking at the percentages in each test, sorry ?

Test 1: 75
Test 2: 77
Test 3: 82
Test 4: 84 (With my friend)
Test 5: 93 (With my friend)
Test 6: 85

I felt that I was more than prepared for my NCLEX exam (after the fact). My advice for anyone taking the NCLEX would be as follows:

Sign Up ASAP After Graduation.

Do not wait. Give yourself 1 maybe 2 weeks to study. I feel that trying to learn and memorize content right after graduation is counter productive. You JUST graduated nursing school. You know at least 70% of the information that you need to know for the NCLEX if you passed your program. There is no way of knowing what content-related information will be on your test because everyone's test is so different. DO NOT waste your time trying to memorize and learn new content. Just stop and trust yourself. If you are doing something such as Hurst review, I would recommend watching videos on subjects that you are not strong in. For instance, I am not great at Fluids and Electrolytes or ACID/BASE. If I could go back, I would have just watched these videos. Do not waste time and energy. Maybe look over lab values daily. That is the only memorizing I recommend. I know how some of you feel that you HAVE to do content. If you have Hurst access, look through their "5th Day Material" handouts. They have great reviews on meds by class if you are pharmacology weak. If you do not have Hurst access, maybe try purchasing the Picmonic package. This seems to be a great site to help learn content, meds, etc. and it is cheap. ($10 I believe).

QUESTIONS, QUESTIONS, QUESTIONS!!!

Do as many questions as you can. Buy the Kaplan Q Bank. Buy the LaCharity PDA book. Buy one other question source such as NCLEX 4000. This is the MOST EFFECTIVE way to study for NCLEX if you are a new grad. This will be enough!!! Try to go through 1500-2000 questions and rationales before your test. You know the minimum competency for content. You need to learn how to answer the questions.

In short...this is what you should purchase: (~150$ total)

  1. Kaplan Q Bank- $49 for 1 month access
  2. LaCharity PDA book- $50
  3. Alternate question source such as "NCLEX RN Mastery" which costs about $35 for a month of access. My school also recommended "UWorld" question bank. It costs $60 for one month of access. I had another friend recommend the NCSBN study plan/question bank. She passed in 75 questions her first try in June 2015. If you have the Hurst Review, use their Q Tests plus one other source for questions. That will be sufficient.

There is a 35 page review floating around on here that is also really helpful. It was VERY accurate on the need-to-know content. I would read over this a few times. I can e-mail you this if you need it, just ask ?

This will be more than enough for someone who has just passed an RN program to pass the NCLEX.

If you have been out of nursing school for a while and are trying to prepare, I would recommend purchasing the online version of the Hurst Review for 300$ and going through all of the content videos. Take their Q Trainer tests AFTER you watch ALL of the content videos- they will not give you more time in the event that you end up failing the NCLEX if you do any of the Q Trainers BEFORE you watch ALL of the videos. Just read all of the directions so you don't screw yourself out of more review in the event of failing (but you WON'T FAIL!)

What type of student was I? I was very strong in clinicals and found most of my nursing school exams difficult. I have never been extremely competent in my "book smart" abilities, but have always been pleasantly surprised by my outcomes and grades. I am a "B" student. I made 2 "C's" and 2 "A's" in nursing school, with the rest being "B". There were times that I did study a LOT, but I still felt that I was able to have a social life in nursing school. Our school did ATI testing. I averaged level 2's for ATI. I was weak in pharmacology ATI. I also passed my ATI comprehensive exit exam on the first try with a 96% prediction that I would pass NCLEX on my first try.

What was my exam like? Well..It was 75 questions. I had a lot of SATA...probably about 30. That is all I can say about my actual exam. The content and style was very comparable to Hurst Review questions and also Kaplan Q Bank questions.

Remember these things when taking the NCLEX:

1. This is a SAFETY TEST. The Board of Nursing wants to make sure that you have the minimum competency to practice safely without harming anyone.

2. With questions, ask yourself:

  • Who would die FIRST if I did not see them?
  • What would keep my patient the safest?
  • If I can only do ONE of these things.....which thing will help my patient the most?
  • What will fix the problem the FASTEST?
  • If it is a delegation question: What patient is the most stable and predictable (for the LVN/LPN)? For the UAP: Can I EAT (Evaluate, Assess, or Teach) it? Then I will not delegate it! I am hungry! :p
  • If the question is SATA: Read each statement individually. Treat each statement as a true or false as it pertains to the question. Breathe through these! YOU CAN do it!

You Passed Nursing School. You Got This!

Believe in your abilities and practice practice practice answering questions. No negative self talk. When you get tired of studying, take breaks! Be gentle on yourself. Pray Pray Pray (to God, the universe, whatever you believe in...!) GOOD VIBES ONLY! Good luck future RN's! ?

Check Out The Following '5 Tips to Prep For NCLEX RN' Video...

NCLEX-RN-2016-Advice.pdf

Hi guys. I am doing UWorld tests as preparation to ncelx. How much percetage of right answers are concedered good enough? Is timing essential in real exam?

My advice to future nclex test takers is use u world and the 35 page study guide. I took my nclex in June and passed with 265, first time. A lot of the answers to my questions could be found on that 35 page study guide. Also in my opinion, the nclex is similar to u world. I did about 600 questions out of the u world q bank , my highest score i think was a 59 percent. But I made sure I reviewed all my questions , including the rights ones. I also used Kaplan as it was highly recommended to me but it was total waste of money, the q bank questions were horrible, sometimes the answers would contradict each other and the in classroom sessions consisted of going over questions.

I'm on a super tight budget and I'm graduating this December! This post helped me feel a little bit better on not paying for a review like Hurst. Still pretty anxious! I'm starting to study now! I NEED to pass the first try and I'm TERRIBLE at standardized test. I'm a decent student graduating with cum laude so my SAT scores don't reflect me well at all. My HESI scores have been between yikes and okay all semester. The only ones I've gotten over a 900 on have been Mental Health/Psych and Pharmacology. Any advice for someone like me? And when I mean tight budget, I mean any advice that is free (if that is even possible)? Thanks so much!! :)

Congratulations RN, your hard work, persevearance and determination paid off. Now you deserve it all.

Best wishes and success!!!!!!!

Hi.. what is the best NCLEX reviewer book to study? Thanks

Hi...congratulations!!...OK so need some advise for fundamental hesi , I took it last semester and failed..this is my last chance before they remove me from the program. What do you recommend to purchase...I've been doing yourbestgrade questions...you think the Kaplan QBank is helpful for this exam? I ve been so stressed cause it's money and time I have dedicated and really do not want to fail this semester..please advise

What is this u world banks and the 35 page review can you provide with info..I'm willing to try anything to pass my fundamental hesii

I passed my nclex few days ago. I believe with 60 questions only. I had about 50% SATA, mostly of communication, education, medication indications and dosage, few questions of diffirent syndroms. I read a Sanders book and did all questions with rationals in UWorld. It took me two weeks of preparation. In the real test, questions are a bit tricky, but not so hard. Now I can say that UWorld is just superior, highly recommend to everybody. I think that UWorld alone would be quite sufficient to pass exam. Good luck to all nclex takers.

What do you recommend for Hesi fundamental, mental and med surge?

Thank you for sharing your experiences

I agree that practice questions should be the core your nclex prep. Repitition is the key. It teaches you to see when they're tryin to trick you on the nclex. I passed in 75. It felt like they were tryin to paint AIDS/HIV as the automatic answer sometimes

Specializes in Critical Care.

Took NCLEX-RN yesterday and found out today via MN BON that I passed. I didn't have to go through quick results or the so called PVT. Maybe it's just MN that post their results so quickly. I read everyone's study strategies when I was studying for the NCLEX and I thought I should share mine as well to re-affirm what all successful NCLEX takers have done.

What I used to study:

1. Hurst Review (online edition). Follow the instructions they give you to study. Make sure you know your core content well and are able to explain a topic when presented to you (eg. Explain what nephrotic syndrome is w/o looking through your notes). I went through one topic per day in a period of a month and a half. I went through each topic again 2 weeks before my exam.

2. UWorld - 1 month subscription. I was doing about 75-150 questions a day but I would only do 10 questions a test in tutor mode. Closer to the NCLEX exam date, I started redoing all my wrong responses and I found that helped me retain information and evaluated if re-reviewing my Hurst notes helped to master the core content. I only did about 1200 questions. I got an email from UWorld stating that they will also include a new NCLEX self-assessment test in the new year so that sounds like a good deal. UWorld is really hard but it definitely tests your knowledge and critical thinking skills. I was at 50th percentile when I started and ended close to 80th percentile near the end (after re-doing all my weak subjects).

3. LaCharity - I did only about 4-5 chapters. I found that it contradicted what I learned from UWorld so I didn't continue and went back to UWorld.

Exam Day: I am a morning person so I did the exam in the morning. Had a good breakfast and arrived at the testing centre 30 mins early. I felt comfortable writing the exam as it felt similar to UWorld but the questions were really hard. I was getting nervous as the questions seemed to get harder and harder but once in a while I will get a question where I knew what the answer was for sure. At about an hour and 50 minutes into the test I got to question 75, I read the question so many times and picked my educated guess/selection. I closed my eyes and click submit, the computer closed the exam and I was out of there! I didn't know what to think after the exam but I just went out to celebrate with friends as I felt that I honestly did my very best to prepare for the exam. I logged in to BON this morning and got the green light saying I passed the exam!

Good luck to everyone writing the exam next year!