Published
So I promised myself that I would write my success story after passing the NCLEX because this forum truly helped me when preparing for the NCLEX. I want to give back to the allnurses community.
List of main resources I used:
Kaplan qtrainers (I didn't finish all of them!)
Saunders Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination 5th Edition (No, I did not read the entire book, and no, I did not do all the ?'s)
The RN Course Book
That awesome PDF with NCLEX tidbits that has been circulating around the site (I read this several times!)
... and tons of other resources (I think this confused me way more!)
My advice for NCLEX takers:
Set time for yourself to study with no interruptions, even if is an hour, a few hours, etc.
Don't overwhelm yourself with lots of resources, you will start getting confused with the inconsistencies
Don't pressure yourself with trying to finish everything, read everything, learn everything... I say this because I was honestly stressing myself out by doing this (on top of taking a class and working part-time at a restaurant) --- I was somewhat against just doing tons of questions because I truly felt like I was lacking on content but doing a bunch of questions really does help, and you start to realize how you should answer certain types of questions
Study how you learn best, don't feel pressured to follow others' learning techniques (for ex. I had a friend who would study by doing tons of questions, no note taking. Heck, I had to write everything down!)
I sucked at pharm and I even avoided studying for it, until the night before. I had so much anxiety when I realized I did not know any meds but I listened to the audio of the Saunders CD and that surprisingly helped
Focus on what you feel you are weak in, even if you don't want to
I read forums of others' success and advice/tips from here
Day of the test:
Don't let anyone drive you to the test center (lol), I did and ended up fighting with the boyfriend
Take a deep breath before the test and remind yourself that you've learned multitudes in nursing school and you've most likely done everything you could to prepare yourself at this point
I listened to my favorite song right before the test for some good vibes and energy
If you start losing confidence or start getting tired, take a break! I ended up having to take a break because I started getting angry and upset over the fight I had earlier
Feel free to ask any questions, add comments, etc.
Hi. Question. I am currently a certified pharmacy technician. And I'll be starting school in jan 2013 for RN. I'll be taking pre requisites. Should I start going over some nursing books to familiarize myself and possibly get a headstart?? Or will it be useless? I'm shooting to make the best GPA possible. TIA
Congrats! :)
Can you share the PDFs you got in this forum? Kindly send it to [email protected]
God Bless you!
Congratulations, I am planning on taking the NCLEX mid-February, If possible I would also appreciate the PDF's [email protected]
a very big congrats to you! planning on taking mine January, could you please send the PDF to me on [email protected]. Thank you
Hi! Anyone have the link to the .pdf? Or, helpful cohort... would someone please send it to me at XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
T I A
edited to add: I found this link and there are two helpful docs to take a look at - it may very well be the .pdf (+ another doc) we were all looking for. No exact questions, just good basics, folks.
https://allnurses.com/nclex-discussion-forum/passed-my-nclex-750555.html
Hi Goodie, that is the forum I looked at for the .pdf! Thank you for kindly posting it on here.
Dametriss, I recommend that you focus on the classes you are taking. If they are pre-nursing (chem, micro, anatomy, physio) focus on those subjects, as those are very different and hardly overlap too much in nursing classes. Plus, nursing will teach you a different way to test and think and that may become frustrating. Take it as it goes. I know a lot of my classmates during 1st semester were frustrated because nursing is a lot different in that you can't just memorize, you need to be able to critically think and apply, choosing the best answer.
I had maybe 5-6 pharm questions, 2-3 on very common medications SE/patient teaching. One pharm question was SATA where they gave you the medication and disease/condition. That question was a bit more difficult than the others. For pharm, I suggest you know common medications' SEs and patient education.
I had 1-2 OB and peds. NO med calculations. TONS and TONS of SATA. Like 1/3rd - 1/4th of my test and I must admit that SATA are NOT my favorite. I also had many priority questions. My best advice for that is ABCs and know your expected findings and complications!
Anyways, to everyone going to take it, study hard and efficiently. While taking the test, don't stress yourself out. Give yourself a break if you start getting anxious or you keep dwelling on some question you could not find the answer to. I passed with 75 ?'s on the first try, and I admit I had some questions that were so basic that I was sure I was barely threading along the pass/fail line. Stay positive everyone :).
Can someone who is able to open the PDF that Goodie posted above is so kind and forward it to my email??? Pleaseeee!!! I can not open the https://allnurses.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=11217&d=1340919779
My address: [email protected]
Thanks so much! Blessings.
greentealover
15 Posts
Hi, I listened to the Saunders CD that came with the book! Good luck