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.

erint330

New Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  1. I'm sorry I barely saw this! But I do remember my scores on the 160 practice tests were in the high 700's but I only did them in the beginning. They seemed to take more time, and I got better practice doing tons of short ones than one or two long tests!
  2. Being a nursing student is one of the hardest challenges you'll ever face, trust me, I did it for two years but I made it out alive. To keep this short and sweet, here are some tips on how to study and be a successful nursing student: Discipline yourself!!! -make time to study and don't put it off until the day before, there is way too much to learn and you're not just learning this information for this one test, you're learning it to save someone's life someday. Don't stay up til 12 am with friends, skip that concert, and choose not to be impulsive when prompted with a good time. Prioritize your time studying- I cannot stress this enough, spend more time studying and focusing on what you don't know or understand, rather than going over the WHOLE entire study guide over and over. It is good to know the information you are studying, but once you understand it move on and really focus on what it is you don't know. Relate the content to real life- if you try to memorize everything you learn it may take a while to actually click, try relating the material to a patient with an actual problem and from there you can tie in the labs, EKG, meds, etc. Highlight the important stuff- skim over the chapter and highlight what you need to know and not the minor details, or it will take you 3 months to finish this weeks reading assignments. If you hear the instructor repeat something several times during the lecture, write it down and make a point to get that information down, it's probably important. Spread out your workload- if you have 3 tests next week plan out your time to equally study for those tests. Do not study all week for the first test, and then study only the day before each following test. This will not help you. Give yourself breaks, and take snacks while you study or else you will waste time leaving to get food, and you will get distracted and eventually convince yourself to end your studying early. Don't do study groups if 75% of time is going to be used to talk and complain about nursing school, we all do it. But trust me, it doesn't change things and it doesn't help you. Lastly, simplify EVERYTHING- if you make flash cards summarize the info instead of writing the information from the book word for word, its way too complex to remember. Simplifying is key. Goodluck :)
  3. This may seem long, but I wanted to share with my fellow nursing students the way I prepared for the HESI exit exam and how I passed with a score of 907 on my SECOND attempt. Like many other students, I searched dozens of articles on allnurses.com on how to pass this terrifying exam, hoping I would find something, anything to help me pass with a miracle. My school required a 900 or better to graduate, which was during the hardest semester of my life and I had zero time to actually prepare for this, outside of the 2 weeks I was able to study on top of completing my preceptor. My school uses Kaplan and every instructor recommended this in preparation for the HESI, but after a little research I found that many students felt Kaplan and HESI were completely different, so I decided to try another source, yourbestgrade.com. Many of my classmates had purchased this program ($100 + tax), and I read tons of reviews that found this program mostly helpful during their preparation for the exit exam. This was one of the best choices I have EVER made during my nursing student career. Here is what yourbestgrade program includes: 6 practice exit exams that consist of 160 questions, 10 shorter practice exit exams that consist of 30 questions, and 30 different specialty areas (peds, maternity, management of care, med surge) that consist of 55 questions each. Each of these you can do in test mode- which is timed and at the end you can see what you got wrong and all of the rationales for each answer, or you can take it in study mode- not timed and after you answer each question it tells you right away whether you got it right or wrong and the rationale. Here is how I studied in two weeks. I tried reading the HESI book, which has all of the information possible that you will be tested on but I didn't have time for all of that and reading doesn't stick for me. Then I purchased yourbestgrade, read the introduction on how it all works, and began studying. Each day I would spend any where from 6-9 hours studying. The 160 question practice exams were helpful but a bit long, and I wanted to focus on one subject at a time, so I tried a few and switched it up (but do what works for you). Each day I would do 2 specialty areas in study mode (each one took me about 3 hours so I could get the content down), and then 1 of the 30 question tests first in test mode, then after I completed this I would retake the same test in study mode to review all of the rationales. I did this for about 2 weeks, on and off due to the six 12 hour shifts I had to complete at preceptor. Then the day came to take the test. The morning of the test I did a 45 minute review of a study guide of quick facts that I found on allnurses and reviewed my labs, and then I put all material away. I wished my nursing student friends good luck and we all agreed over our group message that we wouldn't say anything negative and we wouldn't freak each other out, because come on what else do nursing friends do. Once I got to school I peeked at my study guide one last time for a few minutes, put in my head phones, listened to a few songs that calmed me down and got me pumped up and positive for the test, took a few deep breaths, and started my exit exam, which we had 3 hours to complete 160 questions. I was 40 questions in and began freaking out, I knew nothing on this test. At question 75 I only had a little over an hour left and thought "wow I'm really screwed," and I began flying through questions just to catch up to the time. I caught up to where I had over a minute for every question left by question 135 and I thought to myself, there is no way that I passed this and I'm going to have to accept that I will have to take this a 2nd time. I finally got to the last question, hit end, and my score was an 890. I missed the exam by 10 points, and I cried and cried and cried. My life was over, I was so close, and I thought even getting this close was just luck. I can't do that good or get that close again. I had only one week until I took my 2nd and last attempt. HESI sends out a report showing what you did good in, what you did bad in, and your average score in every subject including how many you missed out of so many questions in that subject area. So during my week of preparation I repeated my same study style and focused on the subjects I did bad in which was basic care and comfort, patho, and med surge. The second time around I did my same preparation ritual the day of, I stayed confident, I timed myself throughout the whole exam spacing out my time, and during the last dozen questions I told myself "Okay this is it, you are at 890 and you only need to get these last questions right to pass and really give it your all. Give it all you got on these last few questions, take your time, you can do this." I hit end and I got a 907!! I thought it was a cruel joke someone was playing on me, it didn't seem like real life! Turns out I got the last 12 questions correct, all in a row. And I slumped and cried again, because I finally passed nursing school. I know this is a bit lengthy but for every fearful, stressed, and anxiety ridden student out there; YOU CAN DO IT. This exit exam is stressful, it is hard, and it seems impossible, but I promise you it is not. If you are able to get this far, you know your stuff now just practice the questions and brush up on what you don't know. Know your priorities, who do you see first? Who will die if you don't see them now? Think outcomes, if I choose this answer what will the outcome be? Read the question twice, identify what it is actually asking, and simplify it. And most importantly take your time, and make sure you are allowing enough time for the rest of your exam. I am currently studying for my NCLEX exam next week and I am hoping to pass on my first try in 75 questions, so cross your fingers for me! If you have any questions about the exit exam feel free to ask ?

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.