Thanks for downloading our app! Here’s a guide to help you make the most of your study time:
Our app is primarily designed to simulate the NCLEX-PN exam questions as closely as possible. All 2,500+ practice questions were written by our team of nurses who recently passed their NCLEX PN exam. These questions are based on their study notes from textbooks and review courses and real test-day experience, making them accurate reflection of the NCLEX-PN.
While the app is primarily designed to do practice quizzes and practice tests, we’ve also included our teams study notes for quick reference.
Quick NCLEX-PN Facts
- Test Length: Up to 6 hours, including optional breaks.
- Break 1: Offered after 2 hours
- Break 2: Offered after 3.5 hours
(Note: Breaks count toward your total test time.)
- Question Count:
- Minimum: 75 questions
- Maximum: 265 questions
- 15 of these are unscored pretest questions.
Test-Taking Tips
- Read Carefully: Understand the full question and all answer options before choosing.
- Watch for Absolutes: Be cautious with answers using words like always, never, only, or must.
- Don’t Overthink: Stick to the facts given. Don’t assume or add extra meaning.
- Use Elimination: Rule out obviously incorrect options to boost your chances.
- Check Grammar: Make sure your selected answer fits the question’s sentence structure.
- Rephrase It: Put the question in your own words to uncover what’s really being asked.
- Educated Guessing: When stuck, pick the answer with the most relevant information.
- New Question Types: After completing your exam, you might see experimental questions. These won’t affect your score—they’re just being tested by the exam developers.
Smart Approaches to Prepare for the NCLEX-PN
1. Combine Clinical Judgment with Prioritization Strategies
- Strategy: When asked to choose which client the LPN should assess first, don’t rely solely on ABCs (Airway, Breathing, Circulation)—match them with your understanding of the patient’s diagnosis. For example, a client with COPD experiencing worsening dyspnea takes precedence over someone with minor post-op discomfort, since respiratory compromise can escalate quickly in COPD.
- Why It Helps: This method ties prioritization frameworks to actual disease risks, sharpening your ability to recognize urgent situations.
2. Look for Subtle Signs of Deterioration
- Strategy: Be alert to signs of possible shock or internal bleeding when reviewing changes in vitals, IV therapy, or medications. Even if the scenario doesn’t explicitly mention “shock,” clues like low blood pressure, confusion, or increased heart rate are early warnings that demand action.
- Why It Helps: Catching these indicators enables you to answer priority and intervention questions more accurately, especially in cases involving fluid loss or circulatory collapse.
3. Match Communication Techniques to Patient Needs
- Strategy: For psychosocial and mental health items, select answers that demonstrate empathy and appropriate therapeutic responses. For instance, when caring for a manic client who resists eating, avoid forceful language. Instead, acknowledge their emotional state and guide them gently—e.g., “You seem full of energy right now. Let’s walk together and see if you feel like eating.”
- Why It Helps: The test often checks whether you can adapt your communication style to specific psychiatric symptoms, such as delusions, agitation, or mood swings.
4. Let Pathophysiology Guide Your Understanding of Medications
- Strategy: Go beyond memorizing drug lists—grasp how medications relate to specific diseases. For example, furosemide is commonly prescribed for fluid overload in heart failure. Expect it to increase urine production and reduce blood pressure, but be cautious of side effects like low potassium. If lab results show potassium at 2.9 mEq/L, consider that the medication might be contributing to the imbalance.
- Why It Helps: NCLEX questions often assess if you understand the purpose and physiological impact of medications, not just their names.
5. Make Direct Connections Between Lab Values and Conditions
- Strategy: Create quick-reference associations in your mind. For instance:
- High potassium levels (>5.0 mEq/L) may signal kidney dysfunction or med-related imbalances—watch for ECG changes like peaked T-waves.
- Low blood sugar (<70 mg/dL) can cause symptoms like shakiness or disorientation—often tied to insulin issues.
- A spike in WBC count? Think possible infections like pneumonia or UTI.
- Why It Helps: Recognizing patterns in lab data and relating them to clinical problems improves accuracy in answering diagnostic or intervention-based questions.
6. Pay Attention to Body Region Hints in Neuro and Ortho Scenarios
- Strategy: Specific symptoms often reveal the diagnosis. If a client can’t move their foot properly or has numb legs, suspect nerve issues or diabetic complications. Sharp pain in the toe may point to gout; symmetrical joint issues suggest RA. Respond with condition-specific care like dietary limits for gout or anti-inflammatory drugs for RA.
- Why It Helps: The test uses regional or physical signs as diagnostic hints—correctly decoding them helps you choose the right response.
7. Use Clinical Insight to Tackle “Select All That Apply”
- Strategy: For SATA items, match symptoms directly to the disorder. If the question focuses on hypoglycemia, expect choices like confusion, tremors, and sweating. If hyperthyroidism is the focus, pick signs of an overactive metabolism such as weight loss and rapid heartbeat—don’t confuse it with signs of hypothyroidism.
- Why It Helps: These questions are all about accuracy. Identifying hallmark features of conditions helps you eliminate distractors.
8. Match Infection Control to the Specific Organism
- Strategy: Think infection type when isolation is in question. Organisms like MRSA or C. diff? Use contact precautions (gown and gloves). For TB or chickenpox, airborne precautions apply—use an N95 and isolate in a negative-pressure room.
- Why It Helps: Knowing which protection fits each pathogen helps you avoid common errors on infection-control questions.
9. Recognize Subtle Warning Signs Before a Crisis Develops
- Approach: When caring for a post-surgical client who becomes unusually anxious or has a sudden drop in blood pressure, think beyond pain or anxiety—this may indicate internal bleeding or early shock. Immediate steps could include inspecting the incision area for excessive drainage, checking vitals frequently, and notifying the healthcare provider if bleeding is suspected.
- Why It’s Effective: Acting at the first sign of a complication can stop it from progressing, which is often the focus in questions that ask, “What action should the nurse take initially?”
10. Let the Nursing Process Guide Clinical Decisions
- Approach: If a scenario involves abnormal findings during patient evaluation, your response should reflect the proper order of the nursing process. For example, if blood glucose hasn’t been checked yet, that step takes priority before giving insulin. If complete data is already provided, then move to taking action.
- Why It’s Effective: NCLEX scenarios are designed to test whether you think systematically. It’s essential to determine if the next best step is gathering more information or carrying out a treatment—unless the patient shows signs of a life-threatening emergency.