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I took the NAPLEX last week and wanted to share my experience with anyone who may be curious about it. I never posted on student doctor, just read it for the past year to get information on the NAPLEX so hopefully this will help someone else out!
I know this is lengthy but I wanted to give details to a lot of the questions I was curious about prior to the exam..
I highly recommend requesting a real calculator to use during the exam so you can avoid the on-screen calculator. However, I was told it is only a basic calculator on the computer but this is not the case anymore. My on-screen calculator had every function possible.
I was expecting a dry erase board which would be a pain since I am left handed but it's actually a packet of about 8 sheets (front and back) with laminated pages to do all the writing you want. It wasn't a problem to use at all!
These are the sources I used to study (and did pretty well on the exam)
RxPrep is by far the best. My school provided me both the APHA and Kaplan books. While they are both excellent sources, the RxPrep is by far the easiest to get through while hitting high yield information. I believe that book alone is plenty. Also, the RxPrep Q-bank you can buy (my future employee purchased this for me) is certainly the most similar as to what they will ask on the actual exam. The way the questions are worded were very similar. While they are all useful, I found the STATS questions and MATH questions from RxPrep Q-Bank the best - and definitely made the NAPLEX much easier for those portions. The only thing is the math on the NAPLEX is 99% all fill in the blank so when doing practice math problems, do not look at the choices until you have your answer since they won't be there on the exam. My school also purchased the KAPLAN Q-Bank and the APHA Q-Bank for us but those were not as good as the RxPrep Q-Bank in my opinion. In fact, my classmates and myself found some mistakes with the Kaplans that made me wonder about the rest of their questions.
I also purchased the ProntoPass math cards (not the entire packet). These were very helpful as well. On top of this, I also made sure I understood the 120 math questions floating around this site.
Notice I focused most of my study on calculations which I am very happy I was told to do this - so hopefully you are getting the idea that math is huge for the exam. Without going into details of questions, make sure you know Flow rates, mmols/meq's/osmo, and TPNs. Also don't overlook statistics. As mentioned earlier, the Q-bank from RxPrep on stats was a great resource for this.
The clinical questions were pretty simple - I was not the top of my class by any means but if you paid attention then they won't be a problem. You need to go in telling yourself that you won't get every question right, if you're not realistic about this you will get worked up during the exam and make it much worse for yourself. There was a drug I had never seen before but simply just gave it a best guess and moved on - hopefully you will do the same.
I am going to be realistic and not promise that you will pass it like others have stated, but if you have prepared and even paid attention in class then it won't be a problem. I had some pretty easy rotations so I read slowly through the RxPrep book throughout my rotations, then took 2 weeks off after graduation to hit the math and review RxPrep chapters here and there. I did very well so hopefully you guys will as well.
If you have any questions about it just let me know! Good luck everyone!
I know this is lengthy but I wanted to give details to a lot of the questions I was curious about prior to the exam..
I highly recommend requesting a real calculator to use during the exam so you can avoid the on-screen calculator. However, I was told it is only a basic calculator on the computer but this is not the case anymore. My on-screen calculator had every function possible.
I was expecting a dry erase board which would be a pain since I am left handed but it's actually a packet of about 8 sheets (front and back) with laminated pages to do all the writing you want. It wasn't a problem to use at all!
These are the sources I used to study (and did pretty well on the exam)
RxPrep is by far the best. My school provided me both the APHA and Kaplan books. While they are both excellent sources, the RxPrep is by far the easiest to get through while hitting high yield information. I believe that book alone is plenty. Also, the RxPrep Q-bank you can buy (my future employee purchased this for me) is certainly the most similar as to what they will ask on the actual exam. The way the questions are worded were very similar. While they are all useful, I found the STATS questions and MATH questions from RxPrep Q-Bank the best - and definitely made the NAPLEX much easier for those portions. The only thing is the math on the NAPLEX is 99% all fill in the blank so when doing practice math problems, do not look at the choices until you have your answer since they won't be there on the exam. My school also purchased the KAPLAN Q-Bank and the APHA Q-Bank for us but those were not as good as the RxPrep Q-Bank in my opinion. In fact, my classmates and myself found some mistakes with the Kaplans that made me wonder about the rest of their questions.
I also purchased the ProntoPass math cards (not the entire packet). These were very helpful as well. On top of this, I also made sure I understood the 120 math questions floating around this site.
Notice I focused most of my study on calculations which I am very happy I was told to do this - so hopefully you are getting the idea that math is huge for the exam. Without going into details of questions, make sure you know Flow rates, mmols/meq's/osmo, and TPNs. Also don't overlook statistics. As mentioned earlier, the Q-bank from RxPrep on stats was a great resource for this.
The clinical questions were pretty simple - I was not the top of my class by any means but if you paid attention then they won't be a problem. You need to go in telling yourself that you won't get every question right, if you're not realistic about this you will get worked up during the exam and make it much worse for yourself. There was a drug I had never seen before but simply just gave it a best guess and moved on - hopefully you will do the same.
I am going to be realistic and not promise that you will pass it like others have stated, but if you have prepared and even paid attention in class then it won't be a problem. I had some pretty easy rotations so I read slowly through the RxPrep book throughout my rotations, then took 2 weeks off after graduation to hit the math and review RxPrep chapters here and there. I did very well so hopefully you guys will as well.
If you have any questions about it just let me know! Good luck everyone!
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