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Discussion

Nclex

I took my exam yesterday 6/27/29. Computer stop at 75. This is my 21 time taking the exam. I had only 30-45 minutes left to complete my 6 hours.

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On 6/28/2019 at 5:55 PM, sianee said:

I took my exam yesterday 6/27/29. Computer stop at 75. This is my 21 time taking the exam. I had only 30-45 minutes left to complete my 6 hours.

I've heard of test anxiety, but taking almost 6 full hours to do 75 questions boggles my mind. Not including any breaks you may have taken, 5.5 hours is 330 minutes. With 75 questions that's 4.4 minutes a question. What would have happened if you needed to go past 75? You gave yourself no time to go further. That's far surpassing text anxiety and knowledge deficit. I'm not even sure what realm I would place that in. I'm sorry but it may be time to try another profession. ?

Sianee:

You do need to provide more than one or two or three word answers. From your responses to every single previous poster you do not get why every single person is concerned. If you had provided thought-out answers, and more than just a yes or no or something similiar I think it many of us would want to help, but yet each time you answer it is something such as "I see", "yes". You have not written out any answers in depth. This is the critical thinking necessary to pass the NCLEX. Because of this I understand why you have taken 21 times to pass the NCLEX, and likely will not pass the the NCLEX. In order to pass the exam, you need to comprehend what is being asked, be able to respond appropriately, and digest what is being asked. You have not demonstrated this in this post or in any other post. I am truly sorry you are in this position. If you really want nursing this much and per you, money is not a factor, GO BACK to nursing school. It will help you greatly.

If you don't want to go back to nursing school, it sounds like you want to work in health care. You can use your degree, just not as an RN. I think it is time to consider other options you may have and how you can use your degree in other ways. It would be very hard to understand why you would apply for new grad positions when you are not a new grad anymore.

Wishing you the best in your future endeavors hoping you can find a career that suits you well.

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NCLEX 21 times?

Perhaps you keep missing the questions about the properly applied traction required for resetting compound fractures of the tibia.

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On 7/25/2019 at 3:53 PM, ThatChickOmi said:

You should read some of their older posts.... I'm convinced he/she is just someone that periodically comes on here to pull our strings for a response.

ahahahah I was thinking the same thing! But who would really put in all the years and effort just to scam a bunch of nurses?? Although it's frightening, I kinda think Sianee is telling the truth :((

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