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Welcome
Think. Learn. Succeed.
Stop memorizing.
Start thinking. Start passing.

Passing NCLEX isn't about how many questions you've done. It's about how you think through them. NCLEXRx™ individualizes your prep using evidence-based strategies that move you from memorizing facts to applying knowledge to clinical situations, which is exactly what NCLEX is testing.

Whether you're finishing nursing school or preparing to retest, you're in the right place. Let's get started.

The app doesn't replace your NCLEX prep product — it works in conjunction with that product to help you use the thinking that leads to NCLEX success. You can assess your strategy and build a plan tailored to you that supports improved performance. You'll learn test-taking strategies that are specific to NCLEX and, with AI support, build your knowledge base and test-taking skills to be successful.

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Is this your first attempt at NCLEX?

First attempt

I haven't taken NCLEX yet — I'm preparing for my first time

Retesting

I've taken NCLEX before and I'm preparing to try again


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Your starting point

Based on your answers

Foundation Assessment — The next 5 sections will give you a complete picture of where you are: your self-talk, mindset, thinking habits, stress load, and lifestyle. It takes about 5 minutes and shapes everything that follows in the app.

You can skip individual sections or come back later to reassess your progress.

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Section 1 of 5

Self-Talk & Learning Attitude

The conversation you have with yourself about your ability is not just background noise. It shapes the neurochemical environment for learning in your brain. This matters not just for NCLEX, but for the kind of nurse you're becoming. How you answer the questions below will help you understand where you are with your self-talk.

Your internal voice impacts how your brain functions. When that internal voice is critical or fearful, your brain responds with stress hormones that narrow focus and block learning, retention and recall. When it's constructive and confident, your body relaxes, and your brain opens up to learning. This is rooted in the ways that affective learning impacts understanding and long term memory. Tuning into your internal voice is the first step in improving your ability to think, learn and succeed. Complete the assessment and if changes are recommended, consider a plan for addressing them, then come back and reassess yourself to check your progress.

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Section 1 Result

Self-Talk & Learning Attitude

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Section 2 of 5

Growth Mindset & Locus of Control

A significant factor that relates to your NCLEX success isn't content knowledge. It is what you believe about your own ability to grow. The brain isn't a fixed container with a set capacity. It is a dynamic organ that literally restructures itself in response to your beliefs. How you answer the items below will tell you something important about where you're starting.

When you believe in your ability to learn, you form new connections and pathways in your brain. With those beliefs, the actual structure of your brain changes! The structural changes build new pathways that improve your ability to learn, understand, and retain information. This is neuroplasticity, and it means that beliefs like "I'm not smart enough to be a nurse" interfere with your ability to succeed. Understanding your beliefs about your ability and changing them is as important on your journey as taking hundreds of practice questions.

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Section 2 Result

Growth Mindset & Locus of Control

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Section 3 of 5

Critical Thinking

NCLEX is not a memory test. It is a thinking test. The exam presents clinical situations and asks you to reason through them using clinical judgment. Critical thinking is the habit of asking how and why to deepen understanding — it allows you to move information from "I memorized it" to "I can use it." How you answer the items below will tell you something important about where your thinking habits are right now.

Memorizing facts without understanding the reasoning behind them leads to a dead end on NCLEX. Critical thinking is the foundation for understanding and taking the next steps from knowing something to knowing what to do about it in a clinical scenario. This is clinical judgment. The AI tools in this app will move you from memorization to understanding.

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Section 3 Result

Critical Thinking

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Section 4 of 5

Stress

Some stress is normal, and in the right amount, it can actually help you stay focused and motivated. But stress that becomes cumulative, piles on top of life demands, or never fully goes away, does something very different. Understanding where your stress is coming from is the first step toward doing something about it.

Stress triggers a neurological response that narrows your thinking, impairs your ability to take in new information, and makes it harder to retrieve what you already know. The sources of stress during NCLEX preparation can feel overwhelming. Understanding where your stress is coming from is the first step. Managing your stress is not separate from your preparation — it is part of it.

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Section 4 Result

Stress

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Section 5 of 5

Lifestyle

Your brain is an organ. Like every other organ in your body, it performs best when it is well rested, well nourished, physically supported, and given time to recover. This is not a wellness conversation. This is a brain performance conversation. How you answer the items below will tell you something important about how your daily habits are supporting your NCLEX preparation.

Your lifestyle choices impact how well your brain performs. During sleep, your brain transfers what you learned into long-term memory. Physical activity increases oxygen delivery to your brain cells. Intentional rest builds the gray matter capacity that makes focused learning possible. What you eat fuels the neurotransmitters that carry information through your brain. Each of these things is directly connected to your ability to prepare for and perform well on NCLEX.

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Section 5 Result

Lifestyle

Gap Engine
Gap Engine
Deep learning for your gaps
Active Learning
Active Learning
Quiz yourself
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Strategies
NCLEXRx Testing
Strategy Guide
Foundation
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Foundation

Your Learning Profile

Review your results — reassess anytime

Your Foundation scores show where you were when you started. As you use the app and apply the strategies, come back to any section and reassess yourself to track your progress over time.

Strategies

NCLEXRx Testing Strategy Guide

Think. Learn. Succeed.

Before you do another practice question, read this.

Most students take practice tests the wrong way. They move through questions quickly, check the answer after each one, read the rationale, and move on. That feels productive but doesn't support learning.

Every practice test you take should mirror your NCLEX: 85 questions, no interruptions, no distractions, no answer review mid-session. One question at a time. All the way through. Then review.

When your session is done, bring your gaps to the Gap Engine.

What's inside

The NCLEXRx Testing Strategy Guide walks you through the five-step method for reading and answering every question, strategies for each question type, how to use cues and keywords, and how to analyze your test-taking errors.

Return here any time before a practice session to refresh your approach.

Strategies

NCLEXRx Testing Strategy Guide

Apply each time you take a practice test

Take every practice test as if it were your NCLEX.

You cannot train your mind for the marathon of NCLEX with practice tests that are like sprints.

Use the strategies here to eliminate reading, focus, and analysis errors. This leaves you with awareness of your knowledge gaps. What content, concept, or topic in the question did you not know well enough to correctly answer a question? Bring that content, concept, or topic to the Gap Engine.

The NCLEXRx Five-Step Method

Use this method for every question you take — so that the only time you answer a question incorrectly is when you don't know the content. It takes practice to make this your habit. Write the steps on a card and keep it at your computer until it becomes automatic.

1

Read the question — before looking at the answers

Cover the answer choices before you read the scenario and the stem. Read for the "right here right now" situation. What is happening with this patient at this moment?

Do not let the answers anchor your thinking before you've formed your own.

2

Identify the keywords

Still without looking at answers — identify the keywords that are important to the scenario. Keywords tell you what you're looking for:

Is it a priority question? Does ABC apply? Does Maslow apply? Is assessment still needed, or is it complete? Is this an evaluation question?

Be clear about these before you look at answers

Keywords like "newly admitted," "older adult," "unstable," or "first" change what the correct answer will be. Don't miss them.

3

Restate the question

After reading and identifying keywords, restate the question in simple terms. What is the right here right now problem? You can often turn it into a yes/no or true/false question.

Example

Question: A client with an order for furosemide 40 mg IV every 6 hours has a serum potassium of 2.6. Which is the most appropriate action?

Restate: "What does the nurse do when potassium is dangerously low and furosemide is ordered?" You may even predict the answer at this point.

4

Read EACH answer — mark yes, no, or maybe

Read every option. Even if you feel confident about the correct answer, read all four before selecting. The "next best" distractor sometimes appears before the correct answer.

Example continued

A. Assess neurological functioning. NO
B. Assess blood pressure. NO
C. Withhold furosemide and notify HCP. YES
D. Administer furosemide and call HCP. NO

For SATA: restate each option as yes/no independently. Don't change answers based on how many you've selected.

5

Select your answer and move on

Select your best answer and commit to it. Second-guessing after you've worked through all four steps costs you more than it helps. Trust your process.

The Five Step Method applies to every question type. Each format has an additional framework to guide your analysis. Tap any question type to expand its strategy.

📋

Select All That Apply (SATA)

When you see a SATA question, take a breath. Your self-talk matters: "I've got this." Then apply the Five Steps with one key adjustment in Step 3.

1-2
Read and identify keywords as usual.
3
Restate as a yes/no question: Turn the stem into a true/false test for each option individually.
4
Evaluate each option on its own merits. Options that are true in general but wrong for this specific scenario are distractors.
5
Select all that are YES. Don't change answers based on how many you have.
🎯

Bow-Tie Questions

Bow-tie questions present a clinical scenario and ask you to complete a diagram with the most important conditions and actions. Think from the center outward.

1
Read the scenario and identify the key cues about what is happening.
2
Center column first: What is the primary condition or problem you're addressing?
3
Left side: What cues from the scenario support this condition?
4
Right side: What nursing actions address this condition?
📑

Drop-Down (Cloze) Questions

Drop-down questions embed blanks within a paragraph or note. You select from a list to complete the statement.

1
Read the full paragraph or note first — understand context before any blank.
2
Review options for the first blank.
3
Re-read the sentence with your choice inserted — does it hold up?
4
Interpret cues in the surrounding sentences. Connect them.
5
Identify the pattern and state your clinical hypothesis before completing.
🏥

Case Study / Clinical Judgment (CJMM)

Case study questions span multiple tabs and test your clinical judgment across a patient scenario. Use the six-stage Clinical Judgment Measurement Model as your framework.

1
Recognize cues: What data stands out in the scenario?
2
Analyze cues: What do these findings mean together?
3
Prioritize hypotheses: What is the most likely or most urgent concern?
4
Generate solutions: What are the possible nursing responses?
5
Take action: What will you do?
6
Evaluate outcomes: How will you know your action worked?
👥

Delegation Questions

Delegation questions test your understanding of scope of practice. The right answer depends on who is being delegated to — not just what the task is.

1
Identify the patient status: Is this patient stable or unstable? New admission or established?
2
Identify scope: RN, LPN/LVN, UAP — each has a defined scope. Assessment, teaching, and unstable patients require the RN.
3
Match task to role: Stable, routine, predictable tasks can be delegated. Complex, unpredictable, or assessment-based cannot.
4
Apply ABCs and Maslow to determine urgency when multiple patients are involved.
🔢

Ordering / Sequencing Questions

You are asked to place steps or actions in the correct clinical order. Use clinical logic, not memorization.

1
Identify what the question is asking you to sequence — a procedure, triage, or assessment steps.
2
Apply ABCs: Airway, Breathing, Circulation — life-threatening first.
3
Apply safety: assess before intervening, identify before acting.
4
Think through the clinical logic — what must come first for the rest to make sense?

Why Cues and Keywords Matter

NCLEX is an adaptive test. It will always bring you to questions at the highest level of difficulty — questions where you may not know the content. That is expected, and missing those questions is acceptable. What you cannot afford to miss is a passing level question because you overlooked a cue or a keyword. Missing a passing level question drops you below the passing threshold, where you risk failure. Cues and keywords are what prevent that from happening.

Cues

You may have learned about cues as "assessment findings" or "subjective and objective data." The term cues comes from the Clinical Judgment Measurement Model, which identifies recognizing, interpreting, and analyzing cues as the first steps in the clinical judgment process.

In this app, cues means all client data that matters when you read a question: client descriptors such as older adult or adolescent, subjective data, objective data, medical history, laboratory results, and diagnostic findings. Expected and unexpected findings are both cues. A cue can change your entire analysis of the answer choices.

When you read a question, notice the cues. If you are a fast reader, you may need to deliberately slow down — some students keep a blank sheet of paper next to the computer during practice and write the cues down as they read.

Version 1 — with the age cue
Which of the following findings will the nurse expect to see in an older adult client admitted with a diagnosis of pyelonephritis? Select all that apply.
With the cue "older adult," you are thinking about principles of gerontology applied to pyelonephritis — atypical presentation, confusion as a common finding, lower-grade fever, altered immune response.
Flank painYES
HematuriaYES
MalaiseYES
Oral temp 97.2°FNO
HypotensionNO
ConfusionYES
Version 2 — without the age cue
Which of the following findings will the nurse expect to see in a client admitted with a diagnosis of pyelonephritis? Select all that apply.
Without the age cue, you are thinking about pyelonephritis in a general adult patient — typical presentation with classic symptoms like flank pain, fever, and dysuria.
Flank painYES
HematuriaYES
MalaiseYES
Oral temp 97.2°FNO
HypotensionNO
ConfusionNO
One cue. Two different clinical pictures. Missing it costs you the question.

Keywords

Keywords are the words in the question stem that tell you what you are looking for in the answers. They define the direction of your search before you look at a single answer option.

Just like cues — they are important to notice, and fast test takers need to deliberately slow down to catch them. Some keywords tell you you're looking for what is correct. Others tell you you're looking for what is wrong — and this is where many test takers lose points on questions they actually know. needs further teaching means select the incorrect statement. teaching has been effective means select the correct one.

Keywords can also signal priority vs. single correct answer. correct response means one option fits. most appropriate action means you are choosing the priority among several options that may all be appropriate.

Version 1 — looking for the wrong answer
A client with hypertension has been given discharge instructions. Which statement by the client indicates that further teaching is needed?
You are looking for the incorrect statement — the one that shows a misunderstanding.
Version 2 — looking for the right answer
A client with hypertension has been given discharge instructions. Which statement by the client indicates that teaching has been effective?
You are looking for the correct statement — the one that shows understanding.
Same question. Opposite answers. Missing the keyword costs you the question.

Keyword Reference

These are the most common keyword types. The goal is not to memorize the list — it is to build the habit of noticing them before you read the answers.

Direction Keywords — Are you looking for right or wrong?

These words tell you whether to find the correct response or the incorrect/undesirable one.

further (teaching needed) additional (teaching needed) supervision required does not understand would not be appropriate teaching effective understands correctly appropriate response

Priority Keywords — Signals of urgency

Higher priority concerns:

acuteunstablenewly admitted recently dischargednewly diagnosed extremecopiouscritical recent postoperative

Lower priority concerns:

scanttingedminimal chronicunchangedstable oozingready for discharge

Client Descriptor Keywords

These replace "client" in the stem and change what the correct answer will be:

older adultadolescent toddlerpregnant woman middle-agedwell-controlled uncontrolledconfused anxiouson propranolol

Action / Priority Question Signals

These tell you the question is asking for the first or most important nursing action:

what should the nurse do first who should the nurse see first immediate action most important for the nurse to do priority intervention

When you miss a question you should have answered correctly, one of three types of strategy errors is usually responsible. Identifying your error type is the first step in fixing it.

📖 Reading Error

You read the question too quickly, missed a keyword, or misread what was being asked. You "knew" the answer but selected the wrong one because you weren't clear on the question.

The fix

Slow down in Step 1. Cover the answers. Re-read until you are certain what is being asked. If you find yourself re-reading a question after selecting your answer, that's a reading error pattern — address it before your next session.

🔍 Analysis Error

You understood what was being asked but analyzed the answer choices incorrectly — you read into an option, over-thought it, or applied the wrong clinical principle.

The fix

In Step 4, mark each option with YES, NO, or MAYBE before committing. If you're marking MAYBE on more than one option, stop and re-state the question in Step 3. "Maybe" usually means you're not sure what the question is asking — not that both answers could be right.

🎯 Focus Error

You lost focus during the question — distracted, rushed, or mentally elsewhere. The error isn't strategic or clinical; it's attentional.

The fix

Focus errors during practice become focus errors during NCLEX. Your study calendar includes protected full-focus sessions for exactly this reason. Practice the same conditions you'll perform in: quiet space, no devices, one question at a time. Use the Five Steps as a re-focusing ritual for each question.

📚 Knowledge Gap

The question involved content you genuinely don't know or don't understand well enough to apply in a clinical scenario. This is not a strategy error — it's a learning gap.

The fix

Bring this topic to Gap Engine. Not the rationale — the topic. Let the guided conversation help you build real understanding, not just memorize the correct answer for this one question.

Gap Engine

The Gap Engine

Think. Learn. Succeed.

This is where real learning happens.

You bring a topic or concept you don't understand. The Gap Engine will engage you in a critical thinking conversation — a back-and-forth that performs better than your best nursing instructor to help you move to deep learning so you can apply the clinical judgment NCLEX is testing.

At the end of each session, you'll get a reminder to write your key learning "gap note" by hand into a study notebook. Handwriting activates a deeper encoding process in the brain than reading alone — it is the step that moves new knowledge from short-term to long-term memory.

Reading a rationale gives you the answer. The Gap Engine makes you build the understanding. There's a clinical difference between knowing that furosemide causes potassium loss and understanding why — what furosemide does to the nephron, where potassium goes, and what low potassium does to cardiac function. That kind of understanding doesn't require you to memorize every electrolyte value. It lets you reason your way to the correct answer, every time.

Your Study Notebook

Your companion to this app
Study Notes
Furosemide K
Loop diuretic blocks Na/K reabsorption in loop of Henle → K lost in urine → hypokalemia → cardiac dysrhythmia risk
Cover the right column and quiz yourself using the cue on the left. This active retrieval practice is what moves gap content into long-term memory. Use Active Learning to track your gaps and quiz yourself digitally.

Gap Engine

Enter a topic or concept to explore

What topic or concept do you want to work on?

Not sure where to start? Try one of these:

Septic shock
ABG interpretation
Heart failure
Delegation to UAP
Potassium & rhythm
Increased ICP
Topic:
NCLEXRx

Lock It In

One sentence — what's the key thing you now understand? Write it as if you're telling a classmate. Then it goes in your gap note.

✓ Added to your Gap List

Active Learning

Active Learning

Think. Learn. Succeed.

Active Learning is where your understanding moves to fully integrated long-term memory. Here you can quiz yourself on your gaps or create focused practice tests that target your specific weak areas.

Your gap notes are handwritten in your study notebook because that is where the deepest encoding happens. This list is the digital companion to those notes.

The brain consolidates learning through active retrieval — not re-reading. Every time you successfully recall something from memory, the neural pathway for that knowledge becomes stronger. Quiz yourself on the gaps you work in the Gap Engine.

📝

Quiz Me

Select topics. The engine quizzes your recall without your notes — active retrieval that makes the learning stick.

💡

Practice Questions

Select topics and get NCLEX-style clinical judgment questions built around your gaps, at passing level every time.

Gap List

Your topics from Gap Engine sessions

My Gap Topics

0 topics
No gap topics yet. Complete a Gap Engine session to add your first one.

📝 Quiz Me

Select topics. The engine quizzes your recall.

Add topics to begin.

💡 Practice Questions

Select topics. Get NCLEX-style questions.

Add topics to begin.

Quiz Session

NCLEXRx

Practice Questions

Generating your practice questions…