How should I study for NREMT-P with so many options out there?

notshot99

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Hi there.

I am new to this site, and I am sure this is a thread that gets put out there a lot so please forgive me. I have my nremt-p written in 25 days and I am trying to study, but I'm feeling very overwhelmed. I tried to use the Emt National Testing website, but I keep finding that when I go to my books to compare answers they they are wrong from time to time.

What system did you guys and girls use to best prepare you for the written?
I already passed my skills and this is the last hurdle in my way.

Signed,
A very stressed out paramedic student.
 
Know the learning mode* which works for you and go that way IF it is a good program.

*listening, repeating, writing, doing, demonstrating, reading. Or whatever you want! Some people like mnemonics, some actually sing.
 
I have used multiple outlets to study: Mometrix Guide, Barrons Guide, MEL.org, EMT-National-Training, Parameducators, EMTprep

The more outlets and styles you use, the better coverage area you receive. I have to take my written as well, but there are many options available and I have used a ton of them, lol.
 
Jb learning is very popular. I know several that failed their first few attempts and passed after using jb. Many here also recommend it.

Don't make the nr into more than what it is. Don't psych yourself out before you even walk into the testing Center. Take your time , read the questions carefully and select the most appropriate answer.
 
Jb learning is very popular. I know several that failed their first few attempts and passed after using jb. Many here also recommend it.

I didn't use JB learning to study for the test, per se, but it was part of my medic program, and I thought it did a very good job of presenting the information again.

Don't make the nr into more than what it is. Don't psych yourself out before you even walk into the testing Center. Take your time , read the questions carefully and select the most appropriate answer.

That. The NR test isn't as scary as people make it out to be, if you passed your course, then you almost certainly know everything you need to in order to pass the NR (assuming you didn't go to a patch mill, even if you did, you probably can pass it.). I''m relatively convinced that the reason most failures on the NR occur is because of test anxiety.

Also, as the NR test is all multiple choice, it wouldn't be a bad idea to brush up on test taking strategies, there are various (free) resources around the web for it, and largely it doesn't matter which you choose.
 
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