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Took my Nclex-RN today
Hey :) I would average around 60% on my Qbanks, sometimes upper 60%. I would not get too tied up with Kaplan predicting your outcome with the NCLEX but I will tell you that Kaplan is way harder then the NCLEX: at least for me it was. Best of luck! :)
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July Washington Hospital Center RN Residency
Hi Charmed. Are you planning on living in the D.C. area? I live in Maryland and I know that the cost of living in D.C. is higher then it is in Maryland. Have you done any apartment searches? I rent a place with my Husband and we pay about 1,300 a month but we split the costs. It all really depends what you are looking for. Good luck!
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New Graduate RN in Maryland
I am so Happy I found a job :) I can't wait to start! I am in the middle of packing up my old place and moving into a new home with my hubby. Between finding a job, preparing for the job, packing, and getting ready for an intense new grad RN residency program that the hospital I got hired in requires; I have a lot on my plate :w00t: I got hired into the general med/surge unit. It's what I originally wanted in order to get a bit of everything I love the telly unit's. I did my last semester clinical rotation in a telly unit and I learned so much, it was awesome! I wish you the best :)
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New Graduate RN in Maryland
Hi Mekka, Thank you for your reply. I'm really happy to say I have found a job at a really great hospital in Washington D.C. I start my orientation on July 19th. I just kept on applying and the right place at the right time contacted me. Now to start my dream career Good luck to all of you on your job search!
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July Washington Hospital Center RN Residency
Hi Everyone! I am also starting in the RN residency program at WHC July 2010. I wanted to know how is everyone preparing for the math exam on the first day? What materials are you all studying? I'm going over IV drip calculations, PO med administrations, and IV push, etc. Best of luck to all of you! and hope to be working with you all soon :)
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New Graduate RN in Maryland
That's exactly the type of place I've been looking for! I really would not mind working in an out of hospital setting as long as I am able to use my nursing skills. I really want to find a skilled nursing facility that provides trach/vent/more complex care to patients. Any suggestions? Thank you for the reply
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New Graduate RN in Maryland
Thank you for the reply. I've been getting the same from recruiters as well. I'm planning on visiting a skilled nursing facility on Monday and applying for a position with all my important papers in hand. I just want to get my foot in the door, and anywhere will do as long as I'm caring for patients'. Hopefully the situation picks up soon
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New Graduate RN in Maryland
Hi Everyone! I recently passed my NCLEX-RN, and am now an RN in the state of MD. I have been tirelessly searching for employment as an RN in all the major hospitals and it seems I'm getting rejected left and right due to the fact I am new graduate. I feel so hopeless, I wish at least one hospital could give me the green light since I'm so eager to begin working in the profession I love so much. Are there any new MD graduates out there feeling my pain? If so please share, I hope I'm not alone on this one. I've been holding onto hope, and will continue my job search daily, but right now it's looking kinda dry out here for new grads
- Pearsonvue Trick Is this TRUE? Does it work every time?
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Took my Nclex-RN today
Hi Noski, What I would do was set a time limit (example: I divided my time between material review & answering questions), I spent maybe 2-3 hours a day with just material review and I would review as much as time allotted me ( ex: I reviewed cardac, GI in 2-3 hours) and then I would do questions (and the questions were not always related to the topic I reviewed the same day). How I see it is do a nice light review of material--do not get too tied up in trying to memorize everything, know key points--when you answer a question, and you get it wrong read the rationale--and if you still don't understand why it's wrong, look it up. I always found that answering questions was also like a material overview for me because I would read the rationales and write down key points :)
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I took the NCLEX today!
:dncgbby::dncgbby::flwrhrts::ancong!: WE DID IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Congratulations RN
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Took my Nclex-RN today
Just got my results today! It's a PASS, I am officially an RN!!! Thank you God :) :dncgbby::dncgcpd::dancgrp::nmbrn:
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Infection Control Mnemonics
Hi Chris, From what I've studied: when you are going into a patient's room with airborne precautions you wear a gown, mask, respirator, gloves. For droplet: gown, mask, gloves all the time, and for contact: gown, gloves Good luck on your exam!
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I took the NCLEX today!
I totally 100% agree with you on this one. My average for all 1000+ questions on the QBANK was about 65% and the more exposure to higher analysis questions you have, the better. :igtsyt: I think we both took our boards yesterday at 8am, does your state participate in quick results? mines does lol and I hope the results are up by tomorrow at 8 am..I'm getting antsy here :chair:
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Took my Nclex-RN today
Crazitree- Best of luck! You can do this, and you don't need Kaplan to pass the boards..you need you :thankya: Noski- What I did was review my drugs by classes (ex: my penicillins, aminoglycosides, cephalosporins, atypical antipsychotics, etc) and I would write the class, the names of some of the drugs in the class because more often then not they sound the same (ex: ampicillin, penicillin), and I would write down there most common s/e and pt. teaching..I would go over it everyday, it really helps to look at things over and over, it sticks to your memory :)