This article details at length what I believe any prudent NP student should do to adequately prepare for and be successful on the AANP FNP exam. It discusses relevant study materials, reviews, and other preparation tips that I found useful. I found similar posts to this during my preparation for boards to be very useful and therapeutic, and want to share my experience to give back to the community here in as thorough a way possible.
Updated:
Today I passed my AANP FNP exam, two days after graduation. I used this website constantly to read tips and stories about people that both failed and passed, and can't be more thankful a forum like this exists. This is going to be long, but I would like to contribute my 2 cents for others like me that can't get enough info. I loved reading peoples in depth study tips. Here are some useful bits of info I think are important to success:
I don't think the company matters much. I went to a Fitzgerald live review at the beginning of November, and thought it was great for condensing and focusing all the information I learned over the last few years. Although I didn't care much for Fitzgerald herself (thought she was dry and arrogant), the content was great. I also went dutch with a classmate and bought Barkley CD's, which I LOVED. Whenever I heard his voice on the CD's I imagined Mr. Garrison from South Park and thought he was hilarious. Several classmates went to Hollier and Barkley live reviews and also found them to be completely worth it. The point is, they all advertise over 99% pass rates, so they're all good. If you want to eliminate any doubt, do it.
You get over 1000 questions available to you and the rationales are the most in depth of any practice question resource available. I found them to be much more difficult than the actual exam, and I thought there were several similar questions on the exam, although not nearly as complex. These questions help you retain why something is relevant or why it isn't. It also is very light on the non-clinical stuff, which the AANP has none of. Don't be discouraged when you start doing these questions in 10-20 question quizzes and absolutely bomb them. They're hard, and you'll get better.
Some of her Mnemonics (like for heart murmurs), saved me on the exam. I mostly just read the Fast Facts and Exam Tips in each chapter, and didn't focus much on the content since I already had the Fitzgerald and Barkley review manuals. Barkley tells you straight up that his review manual is all you need to study for the exam in terms of content, and he's right. The Fitzgerald manual is great, but has way more than you need and lots of sections that send you online to review additional content.
Reviews on this site are mixed for them, but I found them to be pretty useful even if they're not perfect. Take the tests on explanation mode to get rationales. This also helps you just bypass the theory and medicare/caid questions that trickle into the practice tests, and are not on the AANP. When I first started doing these exams I was scoring in the low 60's, and by the end was getting low 70's to low 80's. They are the most affordable practice exams for the money, and are a great way to track your progress over time despite some dumb questions that aren't on the AANP (like rarely asking you drug dosages, insurance, billing, and theory). I bought a couple practice exams from APEA and Barkley, but don't really think they were worth it for the money.
I know it's expensive at $50, but the questions on this are similar wording and structure to the real thing, and I had at least 4 questions from it that were word for word identical on the real thing. I actually took it twice, once at the beginning, and once at the end of my studies. I first scored a 64 back in August at the start of my last semester, and last week got an 87.
When you read this website and see lots of people saying they failed, it can freak you out, which can be a good thing if it motivates you to study, but too much stress is a bad thing. They are also a small minority of test takers. Remember, in 2013, 88% of people passed the AANP exam (some years over 90% pass). This isn't an exam that's out to screw with you. It's an honest exam. Yes there are questions that you will not know and be pretty clueless, but that's normal. As I went through the exam I marked on my scratch paper questions I was sure I got right, questions I had at least 50/50 chance, and questions I had no clue. When I submitted, I had a little over 100 questions I thought I knew, 35 questions I thought were 50/50, and about 15 I was clueless. You only need about 87 questions right to pass. When you are able to think of an answer before you have finished reading the question on a lot of the content, you're ready.
Good luck to everyone that will be taking the test soon. If you have any questions about study materials or want more tips, please don't hesitate to ask here, or just PM. I am absolutely happy to answer and give back.