Published Jan 21, 2015
Lovely3662
11 Posts
So I took my RN boards back in Oct and failed. I was devastated. I used Kaplan and although I found it to be some help and couldn't make it work this time around (I used it for my LPN). So I am currently doing hurst review (online) and I purchased the PDA and 6th edition Saunders....My exam is in a few weeks and I have had no motivation and I can't help but feel like I am not doing enough. This will be my second time taking it and with a few weeks left to study I feel 100% overwhelmed. Can anyone relate at all to this? I feel so behind with my studies, I am still trying to work my way up to at least 100 questions a day!!!!!! any tips will be greatly appreciated. I literally feel my opportunity slipping away...
NurseGizy
12 Posts
I did my Nclex yesterday, I went through 200 questions ran out of time and I'm currently on hold as your other post from October. I came out of there not thinking I passed... the questions were horrible.. but this cant stop us from conquering our dream of being a Nurse and getting those two letter behind our name RN.. So get to it, find your motivation. You already have the first experience and now going for a second. So you have to give it your all. I plan to use Saunders again and review it along with the Kaplan book.. take in a lot of the pharm, since I got bombarded with it to the wazoo.. keep hopeful and focused. you can do this.
NurseGizy....Thank you so much for the words of encouragement. I'm still working hard at it! Hopefully the second time around will be my LAST time!
ksidhu
I am on your same boat. I took mine in November 14' and am scheduled to take it again 2/24/2015. As soon as I get myself to study, I get anxious, I read the same thing over and over just to understand it, then remembering it becomes a whole different struggle! These are some tips I am using to hopefully get me to pass.
1. DEDICATE SPACE FOR STUDYING.
I can't study in my kitchen, dining room, on my bed or at work. I utilize downtime at work to take practice questions, but it is way too distracting to focus study time in any of those areas. I literally went to a thrift shop, bought a $10 desk and chair that was small enough to fit in my room and I dedicate that space for JUST STUDYING. I've been told to do this in the past, never did it till now and I am actually proud of having that space!
2. YOU HAVE TO HAVE A SCHEDULE
Seriously, get a calendar, print one off, ANYTHING! I know that I have one hour from when I get off work to shower, eat and get ready to study. I know that during my workweek, I study from 6-10. I am disciplining myself and micromanaging myself to keep ME accountable of my time. If I don't adhere to my schedule, I have 'procedures' that follow.
3. DISCIPLINE YOURSELF
If you fail to stick to your schedule, or something unavoidable pops up, you have to make up for it. THIS IS YOUR CAREER. Be your boss. If I veer off my track, I usually use the weekends to make up for it. I'll double the amount of questions I usually have or whatever I feel is necessary depending on how much I feel I missed out on.
4.THERE WILL ALWAYS BE AN EXCUSE
You'll have family, relationships, work, etc., pulling you away from your study time. You just have to say no. When you refuse to hang out or when you have to tell your work that you have a full schedule and can't come in for an on call shift or stay late for a meeting, YOU ARE ONLY TELLING THE TRUTH. Again, THIS IS YOUR CAREER.
5. BE REALISTIC
Don't plan to study for 8 hours if you know you can't. I started out by doing 50 questions a day (split in half actually) and worked my way up to 100-150 a day. Start with something you know you can deal with and challenge your self by adding more everyday. Again, be realistic. If your test is in a few weeks, think of how much you need to challenge yourself and how much more studying you need to add to be more confident everyday to pass your test. It goes both ways, this is the NCLEX after all.
6. PLAN ON WHAT TO STUDY
I wish I could be detailed enough to say how many hours I will spend studying certain topics, but the truth is, I find out what I need to study as I do it. You have to tailor it to yourself. Some programs help organize information for you, but you have to study that information according to your needs. For example, as I answer questions from Kaplan or Saunders, I focus on why I got questions wrong. If it was lack of knowledge, I spend extra time on the subject to feel like I thoroughly understand it. When I come across meds I don't know, I write them down. Same with Labs. Right before I finish studying, I look at my paper of 'need to knows' and I either make flash cards or read up extra on whatever I wrote down. Once you start looking up certain things like meds or labs or disease processes, it will take you on a journey of learning lol. There will be something else related to that one little thing you looked up that you will want to know about. Remember to stay on track!
7. PLAN AHEAD
I know I'm saying planning a lot. But it's just about anticipating your needs and staying organized to not feel overwhelmed about doing so much. I know that I utilize flash cards a lot. So I cut up flashcards Sunday night so I don't spend extra study time on things like that. I also do my planning for the week on Sundays, I grocery shop, put gas in, everything I can think of that I'll need during the week, I do it on Sundays. It may sound excessive, but think of how much all these little things get in the way during your week when you can be studying. I dedicate half a day to being prepared for the week and even though my week doesn't turn out perfect, it does go by smoother and I have been more successful with staying focused.
This doesn't really go into detail of all I do, surprisingly, but you get the idea. I have a notepad that I use to jot down things I need to look up. I do this so that I can finish whatever it is I'm reading and avoid getting off track with what I initially was focusing on.
Also, I end the day with things I want to start with the next day. Let's say I was studying cardiovascular, if I had a bunch of meds I didn't know related to that subject, the next day I use that to begin my study session. I focus on med classifications and try to memorize meds within that category using my flash cards.
Kaplan is a great review. They have great questions and the more questions I take, the more topics I look up and the more knowledgable I feel.
I hope this novel of mine helps somewhat. I'm looking for a study partner/group because I've found that going over information with people, even if it's brief, helps me retain my knowledge more because it's more interactive for me. I'm a kinesthetic learner so I have to feel motivated to learn and actually do it. Connecting with people that are learning the same thing makes it more real for me.
Good luck!
klc626
14 Posts
Hey guys! I am taking NCLEX-RN next week and I'm starting to get nervous! Our program used the HESI exam and I scored a 900 which according to the instructors I have a high chance of passing BUT I am still unsure about the correlation between the two exams. Does anyone have experience taking the HESI and NCLEX and if so, how would you compare the difficulty level. Thanks 😊
Thank you so much for ALL of your advice. :) It seems we will be testing around the same time. and you are so right with the excuse portion. There ALWAYS seems to be something to come up!!! You touched on every issue I seem to be facing at this moment. I can't thank you enough for taking the time out to write.. It's much appreciated. We got this!