Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

allnurses

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

bubbletoes_24

New Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  1. Thank you for the honest feedback. I knew it would probably be harder for me to find a job because I am new to the area (zero connections). You are right though, I expected there to be more open positions available to apply for. I started with going to the hospital websites and seeing the open positions there. When I applied for what I could there, I moved on to Linkedin, other big job sites, and local listings. I haven't had any luck with that because most that I have seen are for experienced RN's. As for my resume, I feel pretty good about it. I have tweeked it here and there recently, so I'm hoping that could be a game-changer.
  2. Hi guys! I am a new grad, licensed about a month ago, in northwest OH (Findlay/Toledo area). [i'm a second-degree RN..first degree in Kinesiology, if that matters] I'm wondering if there are any new grads or other RN's out there in my area that know where the jobs are! I have only been on the job hunt for one month, but have been discouraged by the lack of job openings in the area. I live in Findlay (about an hour south of Toledo) and have applied to Findlay, Lima, and Toledo hospitals. There just aren't that many job openings, except in Toledo. The problem with that is ProMedica seems to run the show, and new grads can't get in unless they go through the residency program. The applications for that closed before I started applying, and probably won't open up again for quite a few months. I am looking for acute care jobs. I don't want to go long-term care unless I have to. Anyone out there have some insight on job outlook here!? Any and all job hunt/career advice for this new grad is greatly appreciated!
  3. Hello All, Like many of you, I have read through (what feels like) hundreds of threads on allnurses about the NCLEX. So I figured I would add my own, now that the dreadful experience is over! Background: I graduated in August 2015 from an Accelerated BSN program. I was an "A" student, but had to study VERY HARD to earn my grades. Right after graduation I moved from IN to OH. It took longer than others that I knew to process my application due to out-of-state issues. I was finally able to schedule my exam for September 30th. Prep: Initially: Saunders (6e), LaCharity (3e) and ATI (our school used this throughout the program). I would read through a Saunders chapter, take the quiz, then do the corresponding topic in LaCharity and ATI. Saunders: Was great for about a week, until I realized all I was doing was trying to write everything down and felt that I was getting nowhere. It is very content-based, and the questions are not very NCLEX-style. It was good for review, but I felt at this point it was pointless to try to re-learn it all. LaCharity: AWESOME. Though I didn't make through the entire book, it was the perfect review for priority/delegation questions. The rationales were pretty good, and I felt that this is the book that helped me the most with knowing what to delegate and whatnot--something I was NOT confident in to begin with. Get this book. ATI: I always did well with ATI in school, and thought it was good for review of the systems. I just re-took many of the practice tests that were still available to me. Once I finally got my ATT, I had 3 weeks left to prepare. I was feeling unmotivated and didn't know how to focus. I ended up buying Kaplan--$50 for 1 month of Qbank questions. My friend also gave me her info for the Qtrainers. Kaplan: Set up is VERY similar to the actual NCLEX. I think the thing I liked best was that I could compare my results with others on here. I didn't get to take the 7th Qtrainer or readiness test, but my other results were: Diagnostic: 64% 1: 71% 2: 63% 3: 56% 4: 59% 5: 61% 6: 61% I did not feel very confident in my scores, but I remediated the questions and just kept taking more Qbank quizzes. The questions were very much NCLEX-style. I would recommend buying the 1 month Qbank if you are not wanting to spend a lot of money. Day of Exam: My exam was scheduled for 2pm. I had to drive an hour to take the Exam, so naturally I got to the testing center 2 hours early. I tried to eat something, but that wasn't really possible due to my nerves. I bought a bunch of snacks, water, and gatorade to prepare for a 6 hour/265 question test. I sat in my car for a bit, but finally decided I would go check in. So at 1:30, I started the exam. I turned off the questions so that I wouldn't fixate on the number I was on. I didn't count the number of SATA I was getting, but I would say I ended up getting maybe 15-20. I couldn't handle it anymore and turned the questions back on, around 65. After 75 questions, the computer screen went blue. I was done, and I felt numb. I did NOT feel confident in my answers, but I was so relieved to be done with that test. After the Exam: I didn't do the PVT. I knew it wouldn't lessen my anxiety, and I didn't want to take the chance. My test was on a Wednesday. So on Friday around 1pm I searched my name on the BON website and found out that I was officially an RN!!! I really can't believe that the NCLEX Exam determines that you are competent enough to be an RN. It felt like another Kaplan quiz, so the questions just felt random. I got 1 med-calc question, 15-20 SATA, no exhibit or ordered responses, probably around 5 medication questions--meds that I didn't know. My advice: Be confident. Take as many practice questions that you can--and understand why the correct answer is correct. Get LaCharity for priority/delegation questions. Know that you can't relearn nursing school--review your weak areas and move on. I honestly did not really review meds during prep. I was confident in cardiac/resp meds, and only glanced at OB and psych. I just figured that I would be able to make an educated guess when they were thrown my way on the Exam and didn't want to take up time trying to memorize that stuff. Know yourself and your study habits. Don't try to study 8+ hours a day, but take the time to remediate and learn the stuff you are getting wrong. Know that you are probably going to get asked questions that you have NO CLUE how to answer. Make your best guess and move on. Nursing school prepares you as much as it can. Happy Studying!!
  4. I was finally, kind of, able to speak to a person from BON this morning. I got the receptionist and she transferred me to someone who would be able to help....only to leave yet another voicemail:mad: I called 614-466-3947, pressed option #4 then #2 to speak to the receptionist. It got me further than anywhere else, and I plan on calling back until I can understand this application process. Hope you are able to get it figured out!!
  5. Thank you for your post! I am currently studying for the exam, and am becoming extremely unmotivated. I was also an "A" student who graduated from an ABSN program, and got a 99% probability of passing on the ATI exit exam. I am currently using Saunders, but the questions seem lower-level to me. I also have the LaCharity book and access to past ATI tests. Would you suggest investing in Kaplan? Did you use anything besides Kaplan in your prep? I study by writing everything down, but it is impossible to do that at this point, so I am finding myself becoming unorganized and in need of some reassurance/advice!
  6. So I know this post is pretty old, but I seem to be in the same boat as many of you were. I have been attempting to get my application checklist processed through the Ohio BON for a few months now. As an out-of-state applicant I received the fingerprint cards, sent them in, and the FBI card came back of "insufficient quality." I ended up waiting 2 weeks until I moved to OH to find a Webcheck location to have them done again. For weeks, nothing has been updated on the website when I search my name. Today when I checked, it now says "application incomplete" and rejected--BCI (background check--even though I received a letter in the mail stating that it was processed and good to go). I have many questions to ask ANYONE at the BON, but there is no way to speak to an actual human that I can find. I have left voicemails at 614-466-3947, and have emailed multiple times. Does anyone know of a different phone number to call that will allow me to speak to an actual person?? I can't apply to hospitals in the area until I am licensed...and it seems that it is going to take longer than expected to get licensed due to this nonsense.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.