TEAS 6 Advice (Questions Welcome)

I have recently passed the new TEAS 6 exam and would like to ease any worries or answer any questions for prospecting nurses regarding the test. With a new version of the exam comes a new wave of concern, and I have broken down each section of the exam and have given you the most important concepts to study. Of course, no specific test material will be given or acknowledged. That being said, ask away! Nursing Students TEAS Article

I recently took the ATI TEAS 6 and scored in the 97th percentile. I would like to help those who have worries or questions regarding the new TEAS test. I am more than happy to answer your questions regarding the test without disclosing any questions specifically. That being said, I will break down what you should know to the best of my ability.

READING

- Can't stress this enough, know what can be found in a dictionary, thesaurus, encyclopedia, index, glossary, appendix, and table of contents. I had several questions on these.

- Be able to pull information from a visual medium (graph, picture, map, etc.)

- Know the difference between facts, opinions, biases, and stereotypes

- Know if a text is being informative, persuasive, or expository

- Know the difference between connotation and denotation, and be able to infer the definition of a word based on the context of a sentence

- Be able to summarize or draw a conclusion from a given text

- Be able to distinguish between a topic sentence, the main idea, and supporting details of a text

- Know the difference between something being chronological or sequential

MATH

A preface on the math section; just because a calculator is used on this version of the TEAS does not mean the math this time is significantly more difficult than previous versions of the TEAS. You can expect mostly the same concepts.

- Be comfortable converting between fractions, decimals, and percentages

- Be able to do basic arithmetic (add, subtract, multiply, divide)

- Know your order of operations (aka PEMDAS) when doing equations

- Solve equations with one variable

- Ranking rationals numbers from least to greatest, or vice versa

- Know how to do to percent increase/decrease problems

- Know how to convert between different units (conversation rates are given to you in the problem!)

- Know what is positive, negative, and no correlation

- Know what skewness is (i.e. when a distribution is skewed left or right)

- Know what independent and dependent variables are and be able to recognize them in a problem

- There are a few basic geometry problems regarding area and length calculation (again, formulae are given to you!)

SCIENCE

Another preface! The science section is the biggest section and is mostly anatomy and physiology. The rest of is comprised of general chemistry and some cell biology.

- Know the anatomical position and the terminology associated with it (e.g. superior and inferior)

- Know the functions of organelles

- Know the hierarchy of an organism, from atom to organism

- Know the structure and function of the 11 organ systems as best you can

- Know the four major macromolecules and what they are made of

- Know about the differences between chromosomes, genes, and DNA

- Know base pairing for nucleotides

- Know how to do a Punnett square and the terminology associated with it

- Know the charges and weights of electrons, protons, and neutrons

- Know what a covalent or ionic bond is

- Know the terms for changing between different states of matter

- Be able to balance a chemical equation

- Be able to determine if a scientific experiment is empirical or poorly designed

ENGLISH

If I had to give a single piece of advice for the English section, it is that just thinking you are literate enough to get a great grade is not enough. Many questions ask about specific grammar terminology you likely need to study beforehand.

- Know when to use an apostrophe, colon, comma, and other types of punctuation in a sentence

- Know the difference between an adjective, adverb, predicate, preposition, dependent/independent clause, and pronoun

- Know the difference between a sentence fragment and a run on sentence

- Know what subject-verb agreement and pronoun-antecedent agreement is

- Know the difference between slang, formal, and informal language

That is all I can come up with at the moment. Feel free to ask questions!

I took and failed the teas 5 twice also. but im only failing the english section.

How did you do on the teas 6? Also did you buy the ati practice tests for either the teas v or teas 6? if so how did they compare to your actual score? please let me know i take my test on Thursday. thanks.

I have but i have not taken the teas6 yet. if you have or hear anythign please let me know.

shelz8 said:
I took and failed the teas 5 twice also. but im only failing the english section.

How did you do on the teas 6? Also did you buy the ati practice tests for either the teas v or teas 6? if so how did they compare to your actual score? please let me know i take my test on Thursday. thanks.

Hi Shelby,

I'm not sure who you are addressing here, but I got a 90 on my TEAS. My practice tests were both 84, so I did slightly better on the actual test. Take this with a grain of salt, though, studying and honing in on my test taking skills/strategy could have easily impacted my score. I hesitate to say that the practice was "harder" than the actual test. It SEEMED easier, but it could have been because I prepared adequately. I would not count on the test being an "easier" experience.

I highly recommend buying at least one of the practice tests. The format and "feel" of the actual test is VERY similar to the practice.

Are your English scores improving? What are you doing to improve your scores?

About how long did it take you get get your results? Did you take the computer format or the pencil/paper format?

hdreeves said:
About how long did it take you get get your results? Did you take the computer format or the pencil/paper format?

I took my test in the computer format and got my scores instantly. They are saved to your ATI profile once you are done, so if you don't want to stick around to read the report, you can do it at home.

Specializes in ICU.

So I just took one of the practice tests from ATI and it gives me the answer to the question after each one showing if I got it correct or not. Is it like this on the actual TEAS?

ellme said:
So I just took one of the practice tests from ATI and it gives me the answer to the question after each one showing if I got it correct or not. Is it like this on the actual TEAS?

No, you do not know what you got right or wrong on the actual TEAS. You get your total score for ALL sections at the very end of the test, but no answers to questions.

can i have ur email please.. thanks

I didn't get my results until 43 hours later :(

OP, I have a question about study time. How much time per day/week did you devote to studying for the exam. I do a 30 minute study then 5 min break system, for approx. 2 to 4 hours daily, but I never know what is too m uch or not enough. Advice?

Hey all! Just got home from taking the TEAS and I scored a 92% (in the 99th percentile). I want to say, the advice given by the OP helped a great deal as it helped calm my nerves! I'm not a typical student and so I don't know if I have any applicable advice besides don't stress out, it'll cause you to doubt your gut instinct of all that you've learned and studied.

Best of luck to those who will be taking it in the future!

I studied for about 1-2 hours each day two weeks prior to the exam. You don't want to burn yourself out when studying, because you likely won't recall much. That was enough for me to get the results I got. Again, I'm not sure how much review you need specifically or long you can focus, but that sounds like a good amount of time.