The last 30 days before the FNP boards is when most candidates either lock in or unravel. There's a natural urge to do more โ more questions, more video lectures, more late nights with Fitzgerald. The candidates who pass are usually the ones who do less, but better.
Here's the plan I've used with hundreds of students. It's not magic. It's systematic.
The final 30 days are for fixing weak spots and building exam stamina. They are not for learning new content.
Day 1: Diagnostic Test
Sit for a 150-question practice exam in one session. Use a quality bank โ Fitzgerald, Leik, APEA, or Rubio Board Review. Don't review during the test. Just answer.
When you finish, examine the breakdown by content area:
- Cardiology
- Pulmonary
- Endocrine
- Renal/GU
- Women's health
- Pediatrics
- Geriatrics
- Mental health
- Dermatology
- Musculoskeletal
- Professional role
Identify your 3 weakest areas. Those become your priorities for the next 30 days.
Days 2โ10: Content Review on Weak Areas
For each weak area, spend 60โ90 minutes daily on focused content review. Use one main resource โ don't bounce between five. Pair content review with 50 practice questions per day, mixed across topics.
Don't waste time re-reading strong areas. They will not improve as much from review as your weak areas will.
Days 11โ20: Question Volume + Pattern Recognition
Now we shift the ratio. Content review drops to 30 minutes daily. Practice questions rise to 75 per day. Always read the rationales โ even on questions you got right. Some of those were lucky.
End of week 2 (around day 14): take another 150-question practice test. Compare scores. You should see improvement of 5โ10 points. If you don't, your method needs adjustment, not more hours.
Around day 18, start doing rapid-fire pattern questions โ match the chief complaint to the diagnosis in 10 seconds, no more. Build speed.
Days 21โ25: Stamina Building
The FNP boards is 3 to 3.5 hours of focused work. Most candidates haven't sat for an exam that long since the NCLEX. You need to rebuild the stamina.
This stretch, do 100 questions in a single sitting โ no pauses, no phone, no music. The first time will be exhausting. By day 25 it should feel manageable.
Days 26โ28: Final Targeted Review
By now you know your remaining weak spots. Drill them. High-yield topics that often need a final pass:
- Antibiotic selection by infection
- Vaccine schedule
- Pediatric milestones
- Lab pattern recognition
- Drug classes by indication
- USPSTF screening recommendations
Keep doing 50โ75 questions a day. No new content.
Day 29: Light Day
Do a small number of questions (25 or so). Walk through your testing day logistics. Pack your bag. Plan your morning. Lay out your clothes. Set two alarms.
Day 30: Rest
The day before the exam should be the easiest day in 30 days. Don't study after lunch. Take a walk. Eat a normal dinner. Watch something light. Go to bed by 10. If you can't sleep, just rest with your eyes closed.
Test Morning
- Wake at your normal time, not earlier.
- Real breakfast โ protein + carb.
- Limit caffeine if it gives you jitters.
- Arrive 30 minutes early.
- Three deep breaths in the parking lot.
- Walk in.
Pearl: Read every question twice. Slow down. The candidates who pass are not the fastest โ they're the most careful.
What to Avoid
- Switching question banks mid-prep.
- Reading new textbooks in the final week.
- Comparing your scores to other people's.
- Pulling all-nighters. Ever.
- Rescheduling the exam out of panic.
The Truth
The FNP boards is a test of safe entry-level advanced practice. It's not a test of whether you're a perfect provider. You don't need a perfect score. You need a passing score. And a passing score is well within your reach if you do this work consistently.
Trust the plan. Trust the work. Walk in calmly. And come out the other side an APRN.