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Pharmacy Forums [ PharmD ]
Pharmacy
Pharmacy Licensure and Exams
DESPERATE. FAILED NAPLEX 3 TIMES
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<blockquote data-quote="DrXenha" data-source="post: 21460110" data-attributes="member: 898293"><p>Hey buddy,</p><p></p><p>That's really tough what you are going through. Many of us cannot fathom it, but kudos to you for still persevering, regardless. You definitely had a lot of pressure building up to the unsuccessful attempts. I definitely recommend meditating and focusing on the lightbulb girl and some other dude they have added since I have taken it. Create acronyms to memorize tough concepts. Know 1st and 2nd line options with regards to ID, mainly you need to hone your calculations skills. Anyone who has scored in the 100s knew their calculations and statistics down pat. Do not sleep on the compounding components either. You will get there, you really just have to take things in a bite sized fashion. I took it a few years ago, so we were the guinea pigs when they changed the format to 6 hours. I think the RxPrep videos for oncology, HIV, and a few other sections were sufficient. The questions from RXprep were ridiculous for some of the clinical components. I downloaded the app and just continuously took quizzes when there was down time. They tested multiple concepts, so you could learn and retain more when taking the quizzes and reviewing. I thought the clinical components on the exam were pretty straight forward and you can almost guarantee you'll pass if you know the calculations and compounding. I basically looked at the blueprint to see what the high yield components would be, I am unsure if it has changed or not. I'd just recommend reviewing the bigger disease states: ID, cardiology (HTN, STEMI, NSTEMI, anticoagulation, etc), diabetes, neurology, HIV, oncology, transplant, renal, etc. I created a calendar for myself to parse out the days and ensure I hit everything I wanted to multiple times. I also created study guides ~4-5 pages of notes of key stuff from each section that I could review the next day before starting new material. You need to review the important information and know your brand/generics so you can eliminate some of the obviously wrong answers. Practice calculations and biostatistics regularly, memorize formulas and conversions, write them down daily until you can write it down from memory without reviewing.</p><p></p><p>Here are some helpful hints from a guy on YouTube</p><p></p><p>[MEDIA=youtube]g_--ps0cSAI[/MEDIA]</p><p></p><p>Good luck</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DrXenha, post: 21460110, member: 898293"] Hey buddy, That's really tough what you are going through. Many of us cannot fathom it, but kudos to you for still persevering, regardless. You definitely had a lot of pressure building up to the unsuccessful attempts. I definitely recommend meditating and focusing on the lightbulb girl and some other dude they have added since I have taken it. Create acronyms to memorize tough concepts. Know 1st and 2nd line options with regards to ID, mainly you need to hone your calculations skills. Anyone who has scored in the 100s knew their calculations and statistics down pat. Do not sleep on the compounding components either. You will get there, you really just have to take things in a bite sized fashion. I took it a few years ago, so we were the guinea pigs when they changed the format to 6 hours. I think the RxPrep videos for oncology, HIV, and a few other sections were sufficient. The questions from RXprep were ridiculous for some of the clinical components. I downloaded the app and just continuously took quizzes when there was down time. They tested multiple concepts, so you could learn and retain more when taking the quizzes and reviewing. I thought the clinical components on the exam were pretty straight forward and you can almost guarantee you'll pass if you know the calculations and compounding. I basically looked at the blueprint to see what the high yield components would be, I am unsure if it has changed or not. I'd just recommend reviewing the bigger disease states: ID, cardiology (HTN, STEMI, NSTEMI, anticoagulation, etc), diabetes, neurology, HIV, oncology, transplant, renal, etc. I created a calendar for myself to parse out the days and ensure I hit everything I wanted to multiple times. I also created study guides ~4-5 pages of notes of key stuff from each section that I could review the next day before starting new material. You need to review the important information and know your brand/generics so you can eliminate some of the obviously wrong answers. Practice calculations and biostatistics regularly, memorize formulas and conversions, write them down daily until you can write it down from memory without reviewing. Here are some helpful hints from a guy on YouTube [MEDIA=youtube]g_--ps0cSAI[/MEDIA] Good luck [/QUOTE]
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Pharmacy Forums [ PharmD ]
Pharmacy
Pharmacy Licensure and Exams
DESPERATE. FAILED NAPLEX 3 TIMES