EXAM PREP
7TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)MARGARET FITZGERALD
TEST BANK
1 — Question 1
Reference: Ch. 1 — Prepping for Nurse Practitioner Boards —
Exam Blueprint & Test Structure
Stem: A 34-year-old FNP student reports she scores 75% on
practice quizzes but struggles on full-length timed exams, often
running out of time on case-based items. Which strategy best
addresses her deficit and mirrors board-level preparation?
A. Continue untimed practice to improve accuracy before
adding time pressure.
B. Alternate full-length, timed practice exams with focused
timed sections and review.
C. Stop practice exams and only review content areas with
,<80% accuracy.
D. Increase study hours without changing practice format.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct: Alternating full-length timed exams with
shorter timed blocks improves stamina and pacing while
permitting targeted content review. This simulates exam
conditions and builds time-management with iterative
feedback. Fitzgerald emphasizes mixed-format timed practice
for transfer to board performance.
Rationales — Incorrect:
A. Untimed practice ignores pacing problems and won’t train
exam stamina.
C. Avoiding timed practice sacrifices test-taking strategy practice
despite content weak areas.
D. More hours without format change won’t correct pacing or
question-processing speed.
Teaching Point: Alternate full-length timed exams with focused
timed drills.
Citation: Fitzgerald, M. (2025). Nurse Practitioner Certification
Exam Prep (7th ed.). Ch. 1.
2 — Question 2
Reference: Ch. 1 — Prepping for Nurse Practitioner Boards —
Cognitive Level & Bloom’s Taxonomy
Stem: During a study group, a learner requests practice items
that test synthesis and application rather than recall. Which
,item type best meets this request for board-level rigor?
A. Single best-answer vignette requiring selection of next-step
management using two data sources.
B. Direct factual recall of diagnostic criteria.
C. Matching terminology to definitions.
D. True/false disease prevalence questions.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale — Correct: Board-level synthesis requires integrating
multiple data points in a clinical scenario and choosing the best
management step; this tests analysis/synthesis per Bloom’s
higher orders. Fitzgerald recommends vignettes that require
interpretation and decision-making.
Rationales — Incorrect:
B. Recall items test lower cognitive levels, not synthesis.
C. Matching is low-level recognition rather than clinical
reasoning.
D. True/false prevalence checks recall/statistics, not clinical
application.
Teaching Point: Use vignette-based items that require
integrating multiple data points.
Citation: Fitzgerald, M. (2025). Nurse Practitioner Certification
Exam Prep (7th ed.). Ch. 1.
3 — Question 3
Reference: Ch. 1 — Prepping for Nurse Practitioner Boards —
Item-Writing Pitfalls
, Stem: As an item writer, you draft a question with two answer
choices that are nearly identical except for wording. What is the
primary risk this creates for high-discrimination NP items?
A. It improves content coverage by offering nuance.
B. It creates an ambiguous double-key that reduces item
validity.
C. It encourages examinees to choose randomly.
D. It reduces item difficulty but increases discrimination.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct: Near-identical choices risk double-keying
or ambiguity; this undermines validity and interpretability of
examinee performance and inflates measurement error.
Fitzgerald emphasizes single-best-key clarity for discrimination.
Rationales — Incorrect:
A. Nuance is not worth ambiguity when it undermines single-
key validity.
C. While guessing may rise, the chief problem is invalid scoring
due to ambiguity.
D. Ambiguity tends to lower discrimination and create
psychometric problems.
Teaching Point: Avoid near-identical answer choices to prevent
double keys.
Citation: Fitzgerald, M. (2025). Nurse Practitioner Certification
Exam Prep (7th ed.). Ch. 1.
4 — Question 4