Your loved one is preparing for one of the most important exams of their life—the NCLEX. This nursing licensure exam stands between them and the career they’ve worked years to achieve. As a parent, spouse, partner, sibling, or friend, you want to help, but you might not know how.
This guide is for you. We’ll explain what your nursing student is going through, what they need, and practical ways you can support them through NCLEX preparation—and beyond.
Understanding What the NCLEX Means
Why This Exam Matters So Much
The NCLEX (National Council Licensure Examination) is the standardized test that all nursing graduates must pass to become licensed nurses. After years of nursing school—including challenging coursework, clinical rotations, and countless exams—everything comes down to this one test.
For your nursing student, the NCLEX represents:
- The culmination of years of hard work
- Their ability to practice the career they’ve trained for
- Financial investment paying off (nursing school isn’t cheap!)
- Their identity as a nurse
The stakes feel enormous. That’s why emotions run high during this time.
The Exam Itself
The NCLEX is unlike other tests your student has taken:
- It uses Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT), which adjusts difficulty based on performance
- The number of questions varies (85-150) based on how the computer evaluates competence
- It takes up to 5 hours
- Results aren’t given immediately—candidates wait 48 hours to several weeks
What Your Nursing Student Is Experiencing
The Stress Is Real
NCLEX preparation is mentally and emotionally exhausting. Your nursing student may be experiencing:
- Anxiety: Fear of failure, imposter syndrome, “what if” thoughts
- Exhaustion: Mental fatigue from constant studying
- Mood swings: Good study days vs. bad study days affect emotions
- Social withdrawal: Declining invitations to focus on studying
- Self-doubt: Questioning whether they’re prepared despite years of training
- Pressure: Feeling the weight of expectations from themselves and others
What They’re Not Telling You
Many nursing students don’t fully express their stress because:
- They don’t want to worry you
- They feel they “should” be handling it better
- They don’t think non-nurses can understand
- They’re too exhausted to explain
What NOT to Do
With the best intentions, well-meaning family and friends sometimes add stress. Avoid these pitfalls:
Don’t Ask Constantly About Studying
“How’s studying going?” might seem supportive, but hearing it daily adds pressure. They already think about the NCLEX 24/7—they don’t need reminders.
Don’t Minimize Their Stress
Phrases like “You’ll be fine!” or “Don’t worry so much!” can feel dismissive. Even if you believe they’ll pass, invalidating their feelings doesn’t help.
Don’t Compare to Others
“Your cousin passed on the first try” or “I read that most people pass” doesn’t comfort them—it adds pressure.
Don’t Offer Unsolicited Study Advice
Unless you’ve taken the NCLEX yourself, avoid suggesting study strategies. They have resources and know what they need.
Don’t Add Extra Obligations
Now isn’t the time to ask them to host family gatherings, take on extra responsibilities, or commit to big plans.
How to Actually Help
1. Take Over Practical Tasks
The most helpful thing you can do is free up their time and mental energy:
- Cook meals or order healthy takeout
- Handle grocery shopping
- Take care of household chores
- Manage errands (dry cleaning, mail, car maintenance)
- Care for children or pets
2. Create a Supportive Environment
- Ensure they have a quiet study space
- Keep common areas clean and calm
- Minimize loud activities during study times
- Stock the house with their favorite healthy snacks
3. Be Present Without Pressure
- Offer company without expecting conversation
- Be available for breaks when they need them
- Watch a show together when they need to decompress
- Go for walks together
4. Encourage Self-Care
Gently encourage healthy habits without nagging:
- Offer to exercise together
- Make sure they’re eating regular meals
- Support reasonable sleep schedules
- Suggest breaks when they’ve studied for hours
5. Provide Emotional Support
- Listen without trying to fix
- Validate their feelings (“This sounds really hard”)
- Express belief in them without adding pressure
- Let them vent without judgment
6. Protect Their Study Time
- Shield them from family drama or stressful news
- Handle calls and visitors
- Make excuses for them at social events
- Communicate with other family members about giving space
What to Say (And Not Say)
Instead of… Try…
| Avoid | Say Instead |
|---|---|
| “How’s studying going?” | “Is there anything I can do for you today?” |
| “You’ll be fine!” | “I can see you’re working really hard.” |
| “Don’t be so stressed” | “What would help you feel better right now?” |
| “When is the test again?” | (Don’t ask—they’ll tell you when they’re ready) |
| “What if you don’t pass?” | “I’m proud of you for doing this.” |
The Day Before and Day Of
Day Before the NCLEX:
- Help them prepare what they need (ID, confirmation, directions)
- Keep the environment calm and quiet
- Prepare a comforting dinner
- Avoid serious conversations or stressful topics
- Don’t quiz them or discuss content
Exam Day:
- Let them follow their own routine
- Offer a calm, encouraging send-off
- Have their favorite food ready for when they return
- Don’t bombard them with questions when they get home
- Let them process in their own way
The Waiting Period
After the exam, results take 48 hours to several weeks. This waiting period is agonizing. Your student may:
- Obsess over questions they remember
- Swing between confidence and despair
- Search the internet for “signs” they passed or failed
Your role: Be a calm, steady presence. Distract with activities. Don’t ask about the exam unless they bring it up.
If They Pass
Celebrate! This is a huge accomplishment. Let them bask in the achievement they’ve worked so hard for.
If They Don’t Pass the First Time
About 11-21% of first-time takers don’t pass. If this happens:
- Don’t express disappointment—they’re already devastated
- Remind them that many successful nurses didn’t pass on the first try
- Give them time to grieve before problem-solving
- Reassure them that this is a setback, not a failure
- Support them through the retake process
The Bottom Line
Your nursing student doesn’t need you to understand pharmacology or nursing theory. They need you to understand that this is hard, that they’re doing their best, and that you’re there for them unconditionally.
The best support is often the quietest: a clean house, a home-cooked meal, a listening ear, and unwavering belief in their ability to succeed.
They’ve got this—and so do you.