NCLEX-RN Study Plan: 10-Week Schedule


NCLEX-RN Study Plan: 10-Week Schedule

Week-by-Week Study Guide for the Next Generation NCLEX-RN

Introduction

The National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN) is administered by the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN). It uses Computerized Adaptive Testing (CAT) format with a minimum of 85 questions and a maximum of 150 questions, with a 5-hour time limit. The exam tests the knowledge, skills, and abilities essential for safe, entry-level nursing practice.

The NCLEX-RN Test Plan is organized into 4 major Client Needs categories:

  1. Safe and Effective Care Environment
  2. Management of Care (17–23%)
  3. Safety and Infection Control (9–15%)
  4. Health Promotion and Maintenance (6–12%)
  5. Psychosocial Integrity (6–12%)
  6. Physiological Integrity
  7. Basic Care and Comfort (6–12%)
  8. Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies (12–18%)
  9. Reduction of Risk Potential (9–15%)
  10. Physiological Adaptation (11–17%)

Source: NCSBN NCLEX-RN Test Plan (current edition) — ncsbn.org


Recommended Resources

  • NCSBN Learning Extension — Official NCLEX review course from the exam makers
  • Saunders Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN (Silvestri) — The gold standard review book
  • UWorld NCLEX-RN QBank — Widely regarded as the most representative practice questions
  • Kaplan NCLEX-RN Prep — Strong on test-taking strategies and decision tree method
  • Hurst Review — Focuses on core content and critical thinking
  • Mark Klimek Audio Lectures — Free audio lectures covering high-yield topics
  • NCSBN Practice Exams — Official practice tests from the exam body
  • La Charity: Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment — Essential for management of care questions

10-Week Study Plan

Phase 1: Foundation & Content Review (Weeks 1–4)

Daily Study Time: 4–6 hours

#### Week 1: Fundamentals & Management of Care

  • Topics: Nursing process, delegation, prioritization, legal/ethical issues, informed consent, advance directives, HIPAA, patient rights, advocacy, continuity of care
  • Key Focus: Learn the framework of “who to see first” (ABCs, Maslow’s, acute vs. chronic)
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2 hours: Content review (Saunders Ch. 1–5)
  • 1.5 hours: 50 practice questions (UWorld or Saunders) with rationales
  • 1 hour: Review incorrect answers and make flashcards
  • 30 min: Pharmacology flashcards (start medication review early)

#### Week 2: Safety, Infection Control & Basic Care

  • Topics: Standard precautions, transmission-based precautions, sterile technique, falls prevention, fire safety, disaster planning, restraints, patient positioning, comfort measures, nutrition, elimination, assistive devices
  • Key Focus: Know isolation precautions cold; practice safety priority questions
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2 hours: Content review (Saunders Ch. 6–12)
  • 1.5 hours: 50 practice questions with rationales
  • 1 hour: Review incorrect answers; update flashcards
  • 30 min: Pharmacology review (cardiac medications)

#### Week 3: Pharmacology & Parenteral Therapies

  • Topics: Drug classifications, dosage calculations, IV therapy, blood administration, TPN, central venous access, pain management, epidural analgesia, medication administration routes, drug interactions, adverse effects
  • Key Focus: High-alert medications (insulin, heparin, warfarin, digoxin, opioids); know antidotes
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2.5 hours: Pharmacology deep dive (organized by drug class)
  • 1.5 hours: 50 practice questions (pharm-heavy sets)
  • 1 hour: Dosage calculation practice (20 problems daily)
  • 30 min: Review drug flashcards

#### Week 4: Health Promotion & Psychosocial Integrity

  • Topics: Growth and development (Erikson, Piaget), prenatal/postpartum care, newborn care, pediatric milestones, mental health disorders, therapeutic communication, abuse/neglect, grief and loss, cultural considerations, health screening
  • Key Focus: Developmental stages, therapeutic communication techniques, psychiatric medications
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2 hours: Content review (Saunders OB/Peds/Psych chapters)
  • 1.5 hours: 50 practice questions with rationales
  • 1 hour: Review incorrect answers
  • 30 min: Psych pharmacology and OB medications

Phase 2: Systems-Based Deep Dive (Weeks 5–7)

Daily Study Time: 5–7 hours

#### Week 5: Cardiovascular & Respiratory Systems

  • Topics: MI, heart failure, dysrhythmias, CABG, chest tubes, mechanical ventilation, COPD, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, ABGs, hemodynamic monitoring, oxygen therapy
  • Key Focus: Pre- and post-operative care, emergency interventions, lab values (troponin, BNP, ABGs)
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2 hours: System review (Saunders or Hurst)
  • 2 hours: 75 practice questions (system-specific + mixed)
  • 1 hour: Review rationales, update weak-area list
  • 1 hour: Prioritization/delegation practice (La Charity)

#### Week 6: Neurological, Musculoskeletal & Endocrine Systems

  • Topics: Stroke, TBI, spinal cord injury, seizure disorders, diabetes mellitus (DKA, HHNS), thyroid disorders, Addison’s/Cushing’s, fractures, traction, amputation, post-op neuro assessment
  • Key Focus: Neurological assessments (Glasgow Coma Scale), diabetic emergencies, insulin types
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2 hours: System review
  • 2 hours: 75 practice questions with rationales
  • 1 hour: Review rationales; practice drag-and-drop/ordered-response questions
  • 1 hour: Pharmacology — endocrine and neuro meds

#### Week 7: GI, Renal, Reproductive & Immune Systems

  • Topics: Liver disorders (cirrhosis, hepatitis), pancreatitis, IBD, dialysis (hemodialysis/peritoneal), AKI/CKD, UTI, reproductive cancers, HIV/AIDS, autoimmune disorders, burns, wound care, transfusion reactions
  • Key Focus: Dialysis care, ostomy management, fluid and electrolyte imbalances, infection signs
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 2 hours: System review
  • 2 hours: 75 practice questions (mixed content)
  • 1 hour: Fluid/electrolyte/acid-base review
  • 1 hour: Lab values review (CBC, BMP, LFTs, coagulation studies)

Phase 3: Practice Exams & Weak Areas (Weeks 8–10)

Daily Study Time: 5–6 hours

#### Week 8: Full-Length Practice Exams & Analysis

  • Day 1: Take full 150-question practice exam (UWorld or NCSBN) — timed, test conditions
  • Day 2: Deep-dive review of entire practice exam; categorize incorrect answers by topic
  • Day 3: Study weakest 2 content areas identified
  • Day 4: 75-question practice set (mixed); continue weak-area review
  • Day 5: Take second full-length practice exam
  • Day 6: Review second exam; update weak-area list
  • Day 7: Rest / light review of flashcards only

#### Week 9: Targeted Remediation

  • Focus on your 3 weakest content areas identified from practice exams
  • Daily Schedule:
  • 1.5 hours: Content review of weak areas
  • 2 hours: 75 practice questions (targeted to weak areas)
  • 1.5 hours: Review all rationales (correct and incorrect)
  • 1 hour: Prioritization/delegation/drug review
  • End of Week: Take third full-length practice exam

#### Week 10: Final Review & Confidence Building

  • Day 1–2: Review missed questions from all practice exams; re-study weak spots
  • Day 3: Light content review of highest-yield topics (meds, lab values, isolation)
  • Day 4: Timed 85-question practice test (simulate exam conditions)
  • Day 5: Review only flashcards and high-yield notes
  • Day 6: Rest — no studying; exercise, sleep well, prepare logistics for exam day
  • Day 7: EXAM DAY — Arrive early, bring required ID, stay calm

Daily Schedule Template

Time Block Activity Duration
Morning (fresh mind) Content review / reading 2 hours
Mid-morning Practice questions + rationales 1.5–2 hours
Afternoon Weak-area remediation 1–1.5 hours
Evening Flashcards / pharmacology / light review 30–60 min

Total: 5–6 hours/day (take 10-min breaks every 50 minutes)


Key Topics — High-Yield Summary

  • Priority Frameworks: ABCs, Maslow’s Hierarchy, Acute before Chronic, Safety First
  • Delegation: RN tasks vs. LPN tasks vs. CNA tasks (know scope of practice)
  • Isolation Precautions: Airborne, Droplet, Contact — know which diseases go where
  • Lab Values: Know critical values and what to report immediately
  • Drug Classes: Cardiac, respiratory, endocrine, psychiatric — know prototypes, side effects, nursing considerations
  • Emergency Situations: Anaphylaxis, cardiac arrest, malignant hyperthermia, eclampsia, DIC
  • Growth & Development: Erikson’s stages, Piaget’s stages, expected milestones by age

Test-Taking Tips

  1. Read the question completely before looking at answer choices
  2. Identify what the question is asking — look for keywords like “priority,” “first,” “best,” “most important”
  3. Use the ABCs and nursing process to prioritize when multiple answers seem correct
  4. Never leave a question blank — there is no penalty for guessing on the NCLEX
  5. Don’t change answers unless you have a clear reason — your first instinct is usually correct
  6. Manage your time — don’t spend more than 90 seconds on any single question
  7. If you don’t know, eliminate — remove obviously wrong answers first
  8. Remember: safety is always the priority — the safest answer is usually correct
  9. Trust your CAT — the computer adapts to your ability; getting hard questions means you’re doing well
  10. Stay calm — the exam ends when the computer determines with 95% confidence whether you passed or failed

Sources

  • NCSBN. “NCLEX-RN Test Plan.” ncsbn.org/exams/nclex-rn-test-plan.page
  • NCSBN. “Preparing for the NCLEX Examination.” ncsbn.org
  • National Council of State Boards of Nursing. “NCLEX Examination Candidate Bulletin.”
  • Silvestri, L.A. Saunders Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination. Elsevier.
  • La Charity, P. Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment. Elsevier.
  • UWorld NCLEX-RN. uworld.com
  • Kaplan NCLEX Prep. kaptest.com
  • Hurst Review. hurstreview.com

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the NCLEX-RN exam?

The NCLEX-RN is a professional certification exam. For a comprehensive study guide with practice questions and full-length exams, see our NCLEX-RN Study Guide.

How should I prepare for the NCLEX-RN?

Start with a structured study plan, use official exam blueprints, and practice with realistic exam questions. Our NCLEX-RN Study Guide covers the complete exam content with detailed rationales.

Where can I find NCLEX-RN practice questions?

Our NCLEX-RN Study Guide includes full-length practice exams with detailed answer rationales covering every content area on the actual exam.

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