Saturday, February 17, 2007

The NCLEX gets a little harder...

NCSBN Board of Directors voted to raise the passing standard


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CHICAGO - The National Council of State
Boards of Nursing, Inc. (NCSBN) voted at
its Dec. 5-7, 2006 meeting to raise the
passing standard for the NCLEX-RN
examination (the National Council
Licensure Examination for Registered
Nurses). The new passing standard is
-0.2100 logits on the NCLEX-RN logistic
scale, 0.070 logits higher than the
previous standard of -0.2800. The new
passing standard will take effect on
April 1, 2007, in conjunction with the
2007 NCLEX-RN Test Plan.

After consideration of all available
information, the NCSBN Board of
Directors determined that safe and
effective entry-level RN practice
requires a greater level of knowledge,
skills, and abilities than was required
in 2004, when NCSBN established the
current standard. The passing standard
was increased in response to changes in
U.S. health care delivery and nursing
practice that have resulted in the
greater acuity of clients seen by
entry-level RNs.

The Board of Directors used multiple
sources of information to guide its
evaluation and discussion regarding the
change in passing standard. As part of
this process, NCSBN convened an expert
panel of 11 nurses to perform a
criterion-referenced standard setting
procedure. The panel's findings
supported the creation of a higher
passing standard. NCSBN also considered
the results of a national survey of
nursing professionals including nursing
educators, directors of nursing in acute
care settings and administrators of
long-term care facilities.

In accordance with a motion adopted by
the 1989 NCSBN Delegate Assembly, the
NCSBN Board of Directors evaluates the
passing standard for the NCLEX-RN
examination every three years to protect
the public by ensuring minimal
competence for entry-level RNs. NCSBN
coordinates the passing standard
analysis with the three-year cycle of
test plan content evaluation, conducted
using a practice analysis of entry-level
RNs. This three-year cycle was developed
to keep the test content and passing
standard current with entry-level
practice. A PDF of the 2007 NCLEX-RN
Test Plan is available free of charge
from the NCSBN Web site
(https://www.ncsbn.org/RN_Test_Plan_2007_Web.pdf).




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