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Actual for You - Nursing Education - Passing National Boards
Fastest Way To Generate Economic Growth sent to all state nursing education programs to identify the directors’ perceptions of factors impacting the NCLEX pass rate and the actions taken by programs to address pass rate. Based on the data obtained from 50 respondents (an 86.2% return rate), the task force noted the following:More than 70% of the world's population live in developing or underdeveloped countries normally referred to as the Third World. Over a billion people live on $2 a day or less which is insufficient for economic survival.The IMF and World Bank have over the past 25years played prominent roles in the economies of most poor countries especially those in Africa and South America following the Debt crisis initiated by the Mexican default in 1982.The IMF in particular have forced many to implement painful reforms such as currency devaluations, privatizations, deregulations, removal of budget busting subsidies and countless of others. The objective was not only to quickly revive the economies of these countries but to engineer super-charged economic growth that would lift these countries out of poverty. On the latter count in particular however, they have not succeeded.Was it that these policies were not good? Actually,they were but in most cases either poorly implemented by unenthusiastic governments or applied at the wrong time. And because they brought about a lot of pain, resistance to more reforms increased. Subsequent reforms either had to be jettisoned or postponed. Majority of experts have come to the conclusion that reforms implemented over the past 20years have not brought about any discernable benefits to majority of these countries and that the two Bretton Wood institutions at most only helped to ameli The majority of programs have minimum academic requirements for admission; generally based on minimum scores on standardized assessment tests and/or a minimum required grade point average on high school or college courses. The minimum grade average to earn a “C” in nursing courses tends to be higher than the parent institution’s requirement. The majority of respondents require at least a 75% average to pass nursing courses. Most respondents allow students who fail a course to repeat the course one time, and almost half only allow students to repeat one course in the program. Respondent Have You Ever Faked It In The Bedroom? The following information is from the Oklahoma Board of Nursing Task Force, that investigated the pass and fail rate of nursing students that have taken the NCLEX. The scores for the state of Oklahoma were lower than most of the states in the Union, prompting the formation of a task force and investigation of possible reasons for the low scores. What all perspective nursing students can gain from this report is how crucial it is to sit for the boards as soon as possible after graduation and to take advantage of all the help available in preparing for the NCLEX. The nurses efforts in putting this wealth of knowledge together has been a monumental task and all nursing schools across the country are grateful for the information that they have been able to provide after many long hours of research.This is a question to all of the women out there, have you ever faked it in bed? To be fair I think I already know how most of the women who read this article will answer this question, with a resounding yes! For all you men out there, beware, you may not be as much of a stud in bed as you thought you were.Over the last weekend I was having quite an in depth chat with a very close female friend. I will just say before I continue that she is well out of my league even though I have lets say dreamt about her on more than one occasion. I have accepted therefore that we are just good friends and that we will never be anything more than this.On this particular Saturday night after it has to be said we had both consumed a large amount of alcohol the conversation turned to the subject of sex. Emma as I was call my friend, said that some men take so long to reach the point of climax, that she actually gets bored at times. As the man is going for it, all Emma is thinking after a while is, I wish you would hurry up and get it over with. This is when she starts acting out or faking it, in the hope that it will turn on the man in question enough to climax.Now this was quite interesting for someone like myself who has often struggled to make the act last over even ten minutes! Maybe it is not how long it lasts but is how good it is, while it lasts.My next dream will be Emma giving me some physical examples of wha *Summary of Information from Pass Rate Reports * In reports submitted by nursing education programs with NCLEX pass rates ten percentage points or more below the national average, the following commonalities were noted: • Some programs do not regularly use accessible sources of data to evaluate the correlation between admission scores, grade point average, NCLEX predictor examination scores, and NCLEX pass rate. This impacts the ability of the program to make informed decisions about changes likely to result in an improvement of their NCLEX pass rate. • Many programs have only recently begun the use of NCLEX predictor examinations as a requirement of the program. Data on the efficacy of these examinations and on appropriate follow-up plans is limited. • Grade inflation is a factor leading to a low NCLEX pass rate in some nursing education programs, particularly in programs that allow significant point credit in theory courses for attendance, participation, and completion of assignments. • Some programs do not identify minimum academic requirements for admission to the program. Instead, a point system may be used to select those who are deemed to be better qualified. While the use of point systems in admission decisions may be appropriate, point systems fail when applicant numbers drop. In cases in which there is a small applicant pool, identifying minimum academic requirements (such as minimum scores on standardized pre-entrance examinations) may be necessary to ensure that students admitted have a reasonable chance of success in the program and on the NCLEX examination. • Student characteristics identified by programs as leading to NCLEX failure include a high number of work hours, family commitments, English as a second language, and low admission points. • In some cases, problems within the program, such as resignation of the program director, faculty turnover, inexperienced faculty, lack of knowledge regarding the NCLEX examination and/or test development, and increased use of adjunct faculty were noted as having an impact on the NCLEX pass rate. Nursing education programs tend to take similar actions to address NCLEX pass rate concerns. Actions commonly taken by programs include: o Initiating the use of an NCLEX predictor examination as a requirement in the program o Requiring students to complete NCLEX review, tutoring, or other actions if the predictor examination score is low o Increasing the minimum passing grade o Providing faculty education in the areas of the NCLEX examination and test development skills o Changing or increasing admission requirements *Results of Survey of Nursing Education Programs * In December 2002, a survey was sent to all state nursing education programs to identify the directors’ perceptions of factors impacting the NCLEX pass rate and the actions taken by programs to address pass rate. Based on the data obtained from 50 respondents (an 86.2% return rate), the task force noted the following: The majority of programs have minimum academic requirements for admission; generally based on minimum scores on standardized assessment tests and/or a minimum required grade point average on high school or college courses. The minimum grade average to earn a “C” in nursing courses tends to be higher than the parent institution’s requirement. The majority of respondents require at least a 75% average to pass nursing courses. Most respondents allow students who fail a course to repeat the course one time, and almost half only allow students to repeat one course in the program. Respondents Car Wash Fundraiser Strategies and Hours of Operations Considerations education programs with NCLEX pass rates ten percentage points or more below the national average, the following commonalities were noted:If you are considering running a car wash fundraiser for your nonprofit group you may wish to consider the hours of operation of your car wash fundraiser on a busy sunny Saturday. Obviously you will pick a busy location and a place, which has a water outlet and plenty of room to do the car wash fundraiser.Once you have all those things under control you want to determine how many kids you have that can help you wash the cars and it makes sense to break them into shifts. If you have a high school band with 40 kids then you can break them into four shifts of 10 kids each no more than two hours long and if you wanted to you can run your car wash for eight hours you actually could.However, this is probably not necessary because the peak time for carwash fundraisers is really between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. and the rest of the time should be reserved for the parents cars who drop off the kids and pick them up or last-minute stragglers who came back later because the lines were too busy during the day.If you have a huge group you may want to run the car wash fundraiser 30 minutes early to wash all the parents cars. And you may wish to run it an extra hour or two in the evening. I do not recommend running your car wash fundraiser earlier than 9 a.m. and it does not make sense to run it past 4 p.m.Anything in between is free game, but do remember your peak periods will be between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. and that's • Some programs do not regularly use accessible sources of data to evaluate the correlation between admission scores, grade point average, NCLEX predictor examination scores, and NCLEX pass rate. This impacts the ability of the program to make informed decisions about changes likely to result in an improvement of their NCLEX pass rate. • Many programs have only recently begun the use of NCLEX predictor examinations as a requirement of the program. Data on the efficacy of these examinations and on appropriate follow-up plans is limited. • Grade inflation is a factor leading to a low NCLEX pass rate in some nursing education programs, particularly in programs that allow significant point credit in theory courses for attendance, participation, and completion of assignments. • Some programs do not identify minimum academic requirements for admission to the program. Instead, a point system may be used to select those who are deemed to be better qualified. While the use of point systems in admission decisions may be appropriate, point systems fail when applicant numbers drop. In cases in which there is a small applicant pool, identifying minimum academic requirements (such as minimum scores on standardized pre-entrance examinations) may be necessary to ensure that students admitted have a reasonable chance of success in the program and on the NCLEX examination. • Student characteristics identified by programs as leading to NCLEX failure include a high number of work hours, family commitments, English as a second language, and low admission points. • In some cases, problems within the program, such as resignation of the program director, faculty turnover, inexperienced faculty, lack of knowledge regarding the NCLEX examination and/or test development, and increased use of adjunct faculty were noted as having an impact on the NCLEX pass rate. Nursing education programs tend to take similar actions to address NCLEX pass rate concerns. Actions commonly taken by programs include: o Initiating the use of an NCLEX predictor examination as a requirement in the program o Requiring students to complete NCLEX review, tutoring, or other actions if the predictor examination score is low o Increasing the minimum passing grade o Providing faculty education in the areas of the NCLEX examination and test development skills o Changing or increasing admission requirements *Results of Survey of Nursing Education Programs * In December 2002, a survey was sent to all state nursing education programs to identify the directors’ perceptions of factors impacting the NCLEX pass rate and the actions taken by programs to address pass rate. Based on the data obtained from 50 respondents (an 86.2% return rate), the task force noted the following: The majority of programs have minimum academic requirements for admission; generally based on minimum scores on standardized assessment tests and/or a minimum required grade point average on high school or college courses. The minimum grade average to earn a “C” in nursing courses tends to be higher than the parent institution’s requirement. The majority of respondents require at least a 75% average to pass nursing courses. Most respondents allow students who fail a course to repeat the course one time, and almost half only allow students to repeat one course in the program. Respondent Six Ad Program Guidelines pation, and completion of assignments.If you are new to advertising, or if you're using media or publications you haven't tried before, it's important to assign your ads to outside specialists rather than try to create them yourself. These specialists may be the creative group at an advertising agency, a freelance writer and designer or the ad department of the newspaper, magazine, TV channel or radio station where you plan to advertise. Such people are experienced in translating information about a product or service, target market, U.S.P. (unique selling position) and advertising goals into advertising that suits each medium and conveys an effective image and sales message. Moreover, it's extremely helpful to work with and learn from specialists for several years before you consider doing advertising in-house. Whether you work with specialists or create advertising on your own, here are six guidelines to follow in the development of an ad program: 1. Do your homework. Start compiling your own ad file. Collect ads you like, to give you ideas, as well as ads run by your competitors, so you can monitor what they're doing. Read books on advertising, including anthologies of the best ads of the year, and how-tos by advertising greats. 2. "Sell the sizzle, not the steak." The old rule about selling products based on the benefits and excitement they provide has proved true time and time again. So focus on y • Some programs do not identify minimum academic requirements for admission to the program. Instead, a point system may be used to select those who are deemed to be better qualified. While the use of point systems in admission decisions may be appropriate, point systems fail when applicant numbers drop. In cases in which there is a small applicant pool, identifying minimum academic requirements (such as minimum scores on standardized pre-entrance examinations) may be necessary to ensure that students admitted have a reasonable chance of success in the program and on the NCLEX examination. • Student characteristics identified by programs as leading to NCLEX failure include a high number of work hours, family commitments, English as a second language, and low admission points. • In some cases, problems within the program, such as resignation of the program director, faculty turnover, inexperienced faculty, lack of knowledge regarding the NCLEX examination and/or test development, and increased use of adjunct faculty were noted as having an impact on the NCLEX pass rate. Nursing education programs tend to take similar actions to address NCLEX pass rate concerns. Actions commonly taken by programs include: o Initiating the use of an NCLEX predictor examination as a requirement in the program o Requiring students to complete NCLEX review, tutoring, or other actions if the predictor examination score is low o Increasing the minimum passing grade o Providing faculty education in the areas of the NCLEX examination and test development skills o Changing or increasing admission requirements *Results of Survey of Nursing Education Programs * In December 2002, a survey was sent to all state nursing education programs to identify the directors’ perceptions of factors impacting the NCLEX pass rate and the actions taken by programs to address pass rate. Based on the data obtained from 50 respondents (an 86.2% return rate), the task force noted the following: The majority of programs have minimum academic requirements for admission; generally based on minimum scores on standardized assessment tests and/or a minimum required grade point average on high school or college courses. The minimum grade average to earn a “C” in nursing courses tends to be higher than the parent institution’s requirement. The majority of respondents require at least a 75% average to pass nursing courses. Most respondents allow students who fail a course to repeat the course one time, and almost half only allow students to repeat one course in the program. Respondent Honey, I’m Home! as resignation of the program director, faculty turnover, inexperienced faculty, lack of knowledge regarding the NCLEX examination and/or test development, and increased use of adjunct faculty were noted as having an impact on the NCLEX pass rate.The housing boom has been the main engine of America's economic growth in recent years. Indeed, it is the main reason why the American economy held up better than expected, after the Stock Market bubble burst at the start of the Millennium. Since 2000 the real wages of most American workers, measured in terms of disposable income, have barely budged, yet surging house prices have allowed consumers to keep spending - on credit.Over the past five years, according to the National Association of Realtors, the cumulative total market value of American homes has increased by more than USD 9 trillion to reach a record-shattering USD 22 trillion. These gains have helped to offset both the slide in stock prices as well as the feeble wage growth. In real terms, home prices have risen at least three times as much as in any previous housing boom. Not too long ago, in the Fall of 2005 to be exact, appreciation of housing value was a hefty 15 percent annualized and most analysts thought that average prices were unlikely to fall across the nation.Readers of my articles on Real Estate Economics know that I was one of the few lonely voices anticipating a drop in pricing levels and a slowdown in real capital appreciation which, far from being the beginning of the dreaded bubble burst that many were so fond of predicting, would have instead the beneficial effect of consolidating market wealth achieved thus far. Allo Nursing education programs tend to take similar actions to address NCLEX pass rate concerns. Actions commonly taken by programs include: o Initiating the use of an NCLEX predictor examination as a requirement in the program o Requiring students to complete NCLEX review, tutoring, or other actions if the predictor examination score is low o Increasing the minimum passing grade o Providing faculty education in the areas of the NCLEX examination and test development skills o Changing or increasing admission requirements *Results of Survey of Nursing Education Programs * In December 2002, a survey was sent to all state nursing education programs to identify the directors’ perceptions of factors impacting the NCLEX pass rate and the actions taken by programs to address pass rate. Based on the data obtained from 50 respondents (an 86.2% return rate), the task force noted the following: The majority of programs have minimum academic requirements for admission; generally based on minimum scores on standardized assessment tests and/or a minimum required grade point average on high school or college courses. The minimum grade average to earn a “C” in nursing courses tends to be higher than the parent institution’s requirement. The majority of respondents require at least a 75% average to pass nursing courses. Most respondents allow students who fail a course to repeat the course one time, and almost half only allow students to repeat one course in the program. Respondent How to Test Your DSL and Cable Internet Connection Speed sent to all state nursing education programs to identify the directors’ perceptions of factors impacting the NCLEX pass rate and the actions taken by programs to address pass rate. Based on the data obtained from 50 respondents (an 86.2% return rate), the task force noted the following:There are two measured elements that determine your internet connection speed. They are: The download rate, and the upload rate of data measured in bits per seconds. Usually, it is expressed in Kilobits per second.A bit is the smallest piece of data that can be stored in a computer. The bit can be either "0" or "1". The byte is eight bits. Example of a byte and bits are the following:bit= 0 or 1byte=8 bits1 byte=10011101 (eight bits)A single charcter needs one byte or eight bits to be stored in a computer. So, when the data rate is 1 byte/sec, that means one character per second is the rate at which data is transferred through your connection.This is very slow, and only intended for an example. In order to browse the internet, you must have at least a dial up access with a 56kb/s modem, in order to get a meaningful and practical result.There are different types of internet connection. First they introduced the dialup connection using your phone line, then the broadband was introduced.The broadband internet connections are DSL, Cable, or Satellite internet services. They are widely used and expanding due to the high bandwith.When you get an internet service, your provider states that your speed will be a certain numbers. They usually give you a good idea, but not an exact one. The common asked questions among internet users is:How do I know what is The majority of programs have minimum academic requirements for admission; generally based on minimum scores on standardized assessment tests and/or a minimum required grade point average on high school or college courses. The minimum grade average to earn a “C” in nursing courses tends to be higher than the parent institution’s requirement. The majority of respondents require at least a 75% average to pass nursing courses. Most respondents allow students who fail a course to repeat the course one time, and almost half only allow students to repeat one course in the program. Respondents with a pass rate at or above the national average were slightly more likely to allow students to repeat a course only once and to repeat only one course in the program. A higher number of respondents with a pass rate below the national average had no limit on the number of courses that could be repeated. Most respondents have established a written policy to identify students at risk for failure in the program or on the NCLEX. The indicators most commonly used are scores earned on nationally-normed examinations designed to predict NCLEX success, grades earned in nursing courses, and repeats of nursing courses. Once the student has been identified as at-risk, the majority of respondents will notify the student and require the student to meet with a faculty advisor at least once. Nearly all respondents report using a standardized NCLEX predictor examination, but only 34.8% require students to earn a certain score on the exam as a requirement for course completion or graduation. Student and graduate issues most often identified as negatively impacting pass rate are the number of hours of employment, a limited number of hours spent studying, more family responsibilities, being less academically qualified, and an inadequate amount of time spent preparing for the NCLEX. Respondents with a pass rate below the national average were more likely to note that students spend less time studying. No single faculty/program issue was identified by the majority of programs as having a negative impact on the pass rate. Increased faculty turnover was selected most often as a negative factor. Respondents with an NCLEX pass rate below the national average were more likely to identify that administration has pressured the program to maintain capacity enrollment and that faculty spend inadequate time evaluating NCLEX result data and planning program changes based on the data. The majority of respondents believe that their administrations have been supportive of maintaining high academic standards. - Most respondents report that faculty have received training on test development and instructional techniques. *_Recommendations _* *Recommendations for the Oklahoma Board of Nursing * 1. Clearly articulate and enforce regulations requiring programs to use a systematic program evaluation process to analyze student outcomes on the NCLEX examination and develop appropriate actions based on the analysis. 2. Continue to evaluate full-time faculty to student ratios in the classroom and clinical area to determine the relationship between such ratios and student outcomes. 3. Ensure that pass rate reports include a thorough analysis of student and program factors impacting success on the NCLEX exam. 4. Hold nursing education programs accountable for their NCLEX pass rates. Utilize focus survey visits, warnings and conditional approval status when there is evidence of continued low pass rate and failure to meet educational standards. 5. Develop a mechanism to communicate and encourage the use of best practices that promote NCLEX success. 6. Utilize the annual report for ongoing evaluation of factors influencing each program’s NCLEX results. 7. Provide opportunities for faculty development related to the NCLEX examination and curricular resource sharing. 8. Require that every program whose pass rate is below the standard provide a pass rate report to the Board, regardless of its size. 9. Institute regulations requiring the NCLEX candidate (excluding foreign-educated and o
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