TEAS 6 Advice

Since I received value as a reader - never commented on here before -, I felt I should give back and share my experience if it helps anyone else. Nursing Students TEAS Article

I just took the TEAS 6 this week and scored a total 86%, which personally I am disappointed, but from what I hear, I got one of the highest scores among the people I know who took it, so I am trying to be okay with it. I was trying to shoot for a 90/91 just because of the type of person I am. The program I am applying to has a 64% passing score, so I'm pretty sure I'm okay, and I have a 3.97 GPA with all prereqs being either an A or A+. What messed me up really was the English section - more about that in a minute.

Unfortunately, my grade breakdown was somehow disabled on the ATI site, so I can't get the exact number, but I'm going to try and recall as close as I can:

Reading: 85%
Math: mid-90-something
Science: 89.4%
English: 75%

The resources I used to study was mainly the official TEAS 6 book from ATI, but I did also use the Mometrix one if I wanted to read further about a section. I also used Khan Academy videos for things like genetics and general biology, in addition to just Googling things and reading up on different sites. Honestly the more you read something and expose yourself to the information, the easier it is that it actually sticks since you're reading it from different perspectives. I did also buy the practice test bundle - A&B - and do highly recommend it. It's a great resource for more practice and gives you an idea of where you stand and what you should really be focusing most of your time on. Oh, and I had the TEAS Mastery app on my phone and was always doing questions. I would even reset it and start over, repeating the questions many times. It was a wonderful resource that I also highly recommend.

Now, for the actual exam experience and some advice.

Reading

Personally, I found this section to be trickier, not necessarily harder, than the practice I had done prior to the official exam. In general, I'm pretty good when it comes to reading comprehension, but made enough mistakes apparently lol I was prepared for more "main idea and theme" questions, but honestly, that did not make up the bulk of my exam. I had some questions that more than one answer seemed possible and some of them required you to think about the text rather than be able to use the text to answer the question itself.

I didn't study more than skim through the main ATI manual for this section, so you should be perfectly fine and do better than I did if you actually take the time to familiarize yourself with the information in the book. The passages themselves were not long, but they were extremely boring - some more than others. I felt that there was enough time, but you do have to be able to pay attention to what you're reading the first time rather than rely on reading the text more than once. I had more than enough time to go back and double-check my answers, so if you feel as though there's a question/passage that you may want to spend a little time on, answer as best as you can, but move on and go back if you have time. Also, since this is the first section, your nerves can get the better of you. Try not to stress as you start the exam. I'm sure I made some mistakes just because it was the beginning and I was nervous.

Math

I found this section to be the easiest for me. I was good at math in high school, but forgot it all - it's been a few years lol -, but I was able to refresh my memory since it's really not much more than basic algebra and geometry. The calculator can be used for pretty much every single question in this section. However, be able to do some simple calculations quickly on paper or in your head only because time moves fast during this section and it takes time to key in every number.

Also be very careful as you type in your numbers since that can cause a very simple mistake and it's always possible that what you think is the answer is an option. You shouldn't run out of time unless you personally find math challenging, but practice is key. Know percentages and be able to write out proportions and solve them accurately and quickly based on the word problem given. Fractions and stuff are pretty simple because of the calculator. You can convert everything to decimals. However, know how to add, subtract, multiply and divide fractions, as well as know how to reduce fractions. Know how to put integers in order, both in decreasing and increasing order. Know your metrics, but the questions that expect you to have working knowledge of metrics are very simple.

I would say the ATI manual is all you need for the math section. Know the formulas for circles - area, circumference, etc. You will most likely have at least one related to that and you will not be given the formula. I had one on every practice test and had one on my official exam, so I can pretty much guarantee you'll have one, so commit those formulas to memory. I would also check out Khan Academy's videos on finding perimeter and area of different figures if you're not comfortable with geometry as a just in case you are asked about a shape other than a circle. For this section, I wasn't able to go through my questions twice. As I was checking my answers over, about halfway through I realized there's 3 minutes left, so definitely don't waste your time and try to move quickly, but be careful not to make silly mistakes. You can also write down on your scrap which questions you aren't 100% sure about and want to go back to to not waste time on questions you know you got right the first time.

Science

I also found this section to be relatively simple. It truly is all A&P I and II. I had 2 very basic chemistry questions on my exam and everything else was very basic anatomy and physiology. You will not be asked anything truly in-depth. I actually overstudied because I was scared that they'd ask about hormones in great detail for the endocrine system. They did ask about hormones, but it was more like what organ produces/secretes this hormone. I do not think the ATI manual really did enough for this section only because it tells you what you should know, but doesn't really go into detail. I'd even go as far as to say it tells you you should know more about stuff than you probably will not be required to know, but leaves things out for other things. For example, I was asked about what type of cell secretes a specific hormone, which the book did not tell me I should know.

Studying for this section, I mainly used the secrets book and Google as well as practice exams. This is the section you have more than enough time for. You have like an hour for this one and you really don't need it. I went back and forth over my answers probably 7 times just to ensure I didn't make a careless mistake or was really unsure about a question and still didn't run out of time. The truth about this section is you either know it or your don't. Process of elimination will only help so much because the couple questions I got stuck on really had 2 options I thought were possible because I just couldn't remember which one it was.

English

Now, this one was the worst, which I did NOT expect! I write very well. I know grammar and I know proper sentence structure. In fact, out of every practice test I took prior, I was scoring 90s. The difference? While studying, everything that I was usually faced with dealt with picking out the proper sentence or picking out punctuation. However, my actual exam had a lot of questions that would give me a sentence and then ask me what a word is functioning as: pronoun, adverb, preposition, conjunction, etc. I've honestly never been good with those and some of them were very, very tricky.

So, my suggestion is get very comfortable with being able to pick out a word in a random sentence and say what that word is. You will definitely have questions like that on the exam. The rest of them were proper sentence structure and things like that, which the ATI book I would say is enough to prepare you for. However, this is the section that kills most people, so definitely dedicate time to it unless you know for a fact that you're good with it. This is the one section you have no time to waste. With such few questions, you are given a very limited amount of time and it moves very fast, so try to be careful but move at a good pace.

It's really a hit or miss with this one IMO, but everyone I've spoken with has told me this is the section they did worst on and this is the section that dropped my grade down as well, again, unexpectedly. Some other points from this section are be able to pick out the word that is spelled correctly, so check out commonly misspelled words in the book if you're not good with spelling, and know prefixes, suffixes, and root words. That should have you covered for the english section.

Conclusion

If you have any specific questions, I'm glad to answer them ? I hope this helps some of you guys that are about to take the exam and I wish you guys luck! Number one thing is don't stress. Remember this test doesn't expect you to have the knowledge base a nurse has. It really is just testing your basic knowledge of these subjects to ensure you're capable of successfully completing the nursing program, which requires you to be able to turn a sentence into a mathematical problem that you then calculate, communicate effectively, have very basic knowledge with regard to A&P and chemistry, and be able to read material. Study and you WILL be fine ?

Hello, I also took the test today only to get a devastating score of 72%. IMO I felt like the ATI books left a lot of crucial points out. I am desperately looking for any tips that may help me get a better score. I did purchase the 2 practice tests and did take them. I would then focus on my weaknesses on the practice test. The problems I had the most trouble were the Reading, Math and Grammar parts of the test. Especially for the reading I felt I like I had to go back to the passage way too many times to fully understand what the sentence was actually saying. As well on the grammar portions of the test. I studied the parts of the test where I did really weak but upon taking the actually TEAS, it was hardly there.

ken8295 said:
Hello, I also took the test today only to get a devastating score of 72%. IMO I felt like the ATI books left a lot of crucial points out. I am desperately looking for any tips that may help me get a better score. I did purchase the 2 practice tests and did take them. I would then focus on my weaknesses on the practice test. The problems I had the most trouble were the Reading, Math and Grammar parts of the test. Especially for the reading I felt I like I had to go back to the passage way too many times to fully understand what the sentence was actually saying. As well on the grammar portions of the test. I studied the parts of the test where I did really weak but upon taking the actually TEAS, it was hardly there.

I'm with you. I felt the reading section was trickier than the study manual and practice tests prepare you for. I too kept going back only to realize that in some cases, I could probably go back and still not find the answer because it was more about thinking about the passage as a whole, which is something I'm not a fan of when I'm being graded! lol To set your mind at ease though about your grade, you honestly did not do THAT bad! It's easy to get tunnel vision on here because most people that are actually posting are posting grades in the mid-80s to high-90s, although some will only say hey, I got a 90-something in one section. So, definitely easy to feel like you did awful. What I can tell you from the batch of people that took the test with me - it was spread out among three days with the three groups applying to the same program - 70s is better than average. Most popular number I heard was a 60-something. Some people got 40s and 50s even. The average national score is like a 60-something, which with my 86 put me in the 96th percentile, so look at the bigger picture to not feel to bummed out about your score. That all being said, as I told the other poster, what it truly comes down to is the program you're applying to. Find out what their lowest acceptance score is and then decide how you do it in relation to it. If your program is asking for a 60, you might have performed well enough. The grade won't follow you the same way a class grade does. When you apply to things in the future, they'll be more concerned about your transcript grades and average, not the TEAS.

If you do plan on retaking it, I would go to outside sources for the English section, and I wish I had something good to recommend to use as a resource. I didn't find mometrix helpful. Telling me a verb is an action is telling me (and probably most people) something I already know. I think a better way to prepare for this section, is practice rather than knowing definitions. Maybe by Googling, you might be able to find practice sheets with answers. I think that's best only because as you practice and get things wrong, you can figure out why you thought it was something else and kind of work backwards and understand it better. If I were to take the exam over, that's what I would do.

Math honestly is just practicing. If you're uncomfortable with a specific thing - let's say order of operations. Do 100 different practice problems and I promise you by the time you reach the 50th one you'll be flying through them without a mistake. With this section though, it's most important to get used to turning a word problem/sentence into a math equation more than anything. The calculator makes the actual calculations easier.

Seriously though, don't be discouraged. While I don't know what your program accepts, I can tell you based on what I've heard, you truly didn't do as bad as you think. ;)

Thank you for replying. The program I was applying too was the SDSU nursing program which needed an 80%. I was baffled ,because I thought I did relatively fine on the reading section. When answering the questions I was able to make that connection between what the question was asking and how it connected with the passage. Same with the reading, but for now I might have to take a little break. I had a really bad breakdown because this happened Last year with the TEAS V test which I scored a 71%. I did the same ways of studying I did with the TEAS 6. Altogether I need to get a tutor to truly point out my weak points and not study the items that I think I need approving.

ken8295 said:
Thank you for replying. The program I was applying too was the SDSU nursing program which needed an 80%. I was baffled ,because I thought I did relatively fine on the reading section. When answering the questions I was able to make that connection between what the question was asking and how it connected with the passage. Same with the reading, but for now I might have to take a little break. I had a really bad breakdown because this happened Last year with the TEAS V test which I scored a 71%. I did the same ways of studying I did with the TEAS 6. Altogether I need to get a tutor to truly point out my weak points and not study the items that I think I need approving.

Oh, wow, I'm sorry to hear that! I wish you luck and don't give up! If you want it, nothing will stop you from getting it ;)

I recently took the Teas VI the past Thursday these were my scores

Overall: 82.7

Reading: 89.4%

Math: 87.5%

Science: 78.7%

English: 70.8%

I mainly use the ATI Teas book to prepare me for this exam I've been on and off since late December. The exam wasn't that bad just wish my English score was higher. I mainly studied for the science part the most out of all the rest of the sections.

Congrats on passing your exam !! Im taking mine in feb. For the science section i had to make my own notes because the book doesnt go in depth as for certain hormones and stuff so i added all of that. Im just intimidated by the math section.

Were there a lot of punnett squares ?

steph17 said:
Congrats on passing your exam !! Im taking mine in feb. For the science section i had to make my own notes because the book doesnt go in depth as for certain hormones and stuff so i added all of that. Im just intimidated by the math section.

Were there a lot of punnett squares ?

Don't be intimidated by the math section. Trust me! If you're studying and getting comfortable with the types of questions you'll see on the TEAS, then you'll be absolutely fine. The only thing I'd say to absolutely know going into the exam - literally you can look at it the morning of and be fine lol - is know the formulas for area and circumference of a circle. No matter what type of question you're given with regard to geometry, as long as you know that you'll be okay, but definitely expect one question about a circle whether it's find perimeter or area and be very careful when reading the question because it's easy to read quickly and realize you just added when you needed to multiply lol ;)

On my test, I only had one question related to punnett square and it was VERY basic. The punnett square was given to me and I was asked pretty much to pick out what percentage a certain phenotype will show up. I found the practice questions in the manual that were related to the punnett square a lot more challenging and was actually worried about it. Personally, I still don't understand ratios all that well. I haven't taken a general bio class in god knows how long and I don't even remember covering it. I know the basic principles about the punnett square and how it works and I was absolutely fine, so if you know that much or any more than I do, you'll have no issues. That being said, that falls under a general bio question, so if you end up having one, you should really only have one. From what I experienced, the general bio questions will focus more on cells and cell organelles. But if punnett squares is the only thing you're worried about when it comes to science, you have nothing to worry about because even if that's the one thing you'll get wrong, you will do amazing! Worry more about the A&P stuff because most of the questions will be related to that and you don't want to chance messing those up. The reality is you can't know everything about everything unless you've just taken the classes, have nothing else going on in your life that you can spend the entire month 24/7 not just studying, but teaching yourself everything, or have extensive experience with the material through practice or in some other capacity. What you can do though is try to go into the exam thinking of it strategically and planning for okay, if I don't know X, but I know Y, I will be okay in the end. Focus on what's going to make up the bulk, so you have room to mess up on a random question here and there that you may not have mastered the related subject. So, even with A&P, focus on system thats are more critical or at least have more "basic" questions that can come up. I personally didn't focus on the skeletal system (although I had like 2 questions related, but was okay because my professor for A&P I really focused on osteoblasts/osteoclasts lol), whereas I really, really focused on endocrine because hormones control other systems, which then led me to digestive and reproductive systems. Definitely make those connections - it'll just be easier to retain more information in a shorter period of time. Same thing with integumentary. There's just not that many "basic" questions that can be asked about the system. So, know your layers and the types cells you find in them and what they do, as well as know the diff sweat glands, and you're pretty much covered for that system. For digestion, know the pathway and where things get digested and what enzyme is at work. Reproductive and urinary - here honestly just know the structure and function of the organs associated. Based on practice and my actual exam, the questions that will arise are related to where does X occur or what connects X and Y. Keep it really surface level. You may need to know where sperm is produced, but you don't need to know how long it takes for sperm production to occur or how spermatogenesis occurs, but it helps to maybe know what sperm is called before and after puberty just in case because that can be a basic question. Try to put yourself in the shoes of the test maker. I'm pretty much ranting right now, so I'll stop, but I hope you get my point. Know basic facts and basic connections, and don't worry about the tiny details and you'll be perfectly fine for the science section. ?

shkaca123 said:
I recently took the Teas VI the past Thursday these were my scores

Overall: 82.7

Reading: 89.4%

Math: 87.5%

Science: 78.7%

English: 70.8%

I mainly use the ATI Teas book to prepare me for this exam I've been on and off since late December. The exam wasn't that bad just wish my English score was higher. I mainly studied for the science part the most out of all the rest of the sections.

Congratulations! You def did well on the exam... I'm with you... hate that english section! LOL

I didn't have any question regarding the punnett sqares

is there different versions of the test? I took the test today and didn't do well. Im set to re take in one year. will they change the test or is it one test?

Thank you so much for breaking it down as you did! I take the exam on Saturday and have purchased the online ATI assessment and study guide. I've taken the two practice tests and got both a 74% and 80%. for the science section, the practice tests seem to be straight forward and overall knowledge of the systems and A&P. My question is: I have taken other practice exams online (not through ATI) and they were very in-depth and was very confusing. Would you say the science portion was very much like the ATI practice exams?

the actual test is much more in depth and harder I did well on practice tests A and B but didn't do good on the actual exam. I would refer to your old anatomy and physiology books