If you have started preparing for the Next Generation NCLEX, you have likely come across a question format that looks nothing like the multiple-choice questions you practiced in nursing school. NCLEX bow tie questions are one of the newer item types introduced with the NGN, and they can feel confusing the first time you see…
If you are preparing for the NCLEX right now, you have probably already noticed that this exam feels different from anything you studied in nursing school. The questions are longer, more layered, and they are not simply testing whether you can recall a fact. They are testing whether you can think like a nurse —…
Failing the NCLEX can feel overwhelming. After years of nursing school, clinical rotations, and sacrificed weekends, seeing that unsuccessful result on your screen is genuinely difficult. But here is something that does not get said enough: some of the most skilled and respected nurses working today passed on their second or third attempt. Failing once…
Preparing for the NCLEX-RN or NCLEX-PN is one of the most defining moments in a nursing career. After years of coursework, clinical rotations, and long study nights, everything comes down to one licensure exam. The pressure can feel significant, especially now that the Next Generation NCLEX (NGN) places greater emphasis on clinical judgment, case-based scenarios,…
Nursing school is no joke. Between clinical rotations, pharmacology exams, care plans, and NCLEX preparation, it can feel like there simply aren't enough hours in the day. The good news is that you don't have to study alone — and you don't always have to be sitting at a desk to make real progress. The…
Delegation questions are among the most frequently missed question types on the NCLEX, and the reason is almost never a lack of nursing knowledge. Most nursing students understand the clinical content embedded in a delegation scenario perfectly well. What trips them up is the specific logic the NCLEX uses to evaluate delegation decisions — a…
Not every nursing student has the luxury of an eight-week preparation window. Life does not always cooperate with ideal timelines. You may have scheduled your exam earlier than planned, accepted a job with a start date that requires you to be licensed quickly, or simply realized late that your preparation needs to begin now. Whatever…
Pharmacology is the content area that surprises more NCLEX candidates than almost any other. Students who feel confident in their pathophysiology, comfortable with prioritization, and well-practiced in clinical judgment often find themselves caught off guard by how deeply pharmacology threads through every section of the exam. A question about heart failure management hinges on beta-blocker…
One of the first questions every nursing student asks when they start preparing for licensure is simple: how many questions are on the NCLEX? It is a reasonable thing to want to know. You are planning for one of the most significant exams of your career, and understanding what you are walking into seems like…
There is a particular kind of frustration that nursing students describe after a difficult NCLEX attempt — the feeling of knowing the content but still missing the questions. They understood the disease process. They recognized the medications. They could have explained the pathophysiology in a clinical conference. But when the question asked what the nurse…