1 / 35

Your Guide to CPEN ® Certification

Your Guide to CPEN ® Certification. Get Recognition. Get Ahead. Why Certify?. Nurses seek certification for different reasons: Professional development Career advancement Patient outcomes Public accountability. Your Benefits. Recognition from colleagues Personal accomplishment

corbin
Download Presentation

Your Guide to CPEN ® Certification

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Your Guide to CPEN® Certification Get Recognition. Get Ahead.

  2. Why Certify? Nurses seek certification for different reasons: • Professional development • Career advancement • Patient outcomes • Public accountability

  3. Your Benefits • Recognition from colleagues • Personal accomplishment • Increased confidence in clinical skills • Increased job satisfaction • An edge on career advancement

  4. Professional Benefits • Special recognition • Peers • Nurses Week, Certified Nurses Day • Patients/families • Credential on name badges • Opt-in to BCEN® Registry for public listing

  5. Professional Benefits • Potential for career/financial rewards • Bonuses • Salary differential • Send proof of your credential to your current employer, or to potential employers, using BCEN’s online Publish Credential service

  6. Professional Benefits • Proof of professional growth • Meets a national standard for specialized knowledge • Certified RNs = quality indicator for Magnet® • CPENs are Category N for Magnet application “Nurses who are nationally certified carry a body of knowledge that directly impacts patient outcomes. Patient outcomes are a large part of advancing on the clinical ladder.” - Debbie White, MSN, MSA, RN, ACNS-BC, NEA-BC Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer Saint Luke's Hospital, Kansas City, MO From State of Nursing Salaries: 2011

  7. Patient Benefits • Increases consumer confidence • Promotes accountability • Increases awareness of nursing certification “Nearly 8 out of 10 people surveyed in 2002 were aware that nurses could be certified in a specialty area—in fact, more aware of nurse certification than teacher or physician certification.” Harris Interactive, Inc. American Association of Critical Care Nurses Survey. November 2002.

  8. What is the CPEN Exam? • Exam developed jointly by PNCB and BCEN • Tests knowledge and skills of RNs who provide urgent and emergent nursing care to pediatric patients • Experience-based • Not limited to peds-only or ED-only RNs • Content reviewed and updated, if needed, every 4 to 5 years

  9. Who is BCEN®? Board of Certification for Emergency Nursing • Established in 1979 • Largest certification board for emergency nursing professionals • Develops robust certification exams fostering empowered nurses across the emergency spectrum, who contribute noticeably to patient care, safety, and outcomes

  10. Who is PNCB? Pediatric Nursing Certification Board • Established in 1975 by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners (NAPNAP) • Largest certification board for nursing professionals who care for pediatric populations • Strengthening care for children is at the heart of everything PNCB does

  11. CPEN Exam Eligibility Recommended • 2 years of full-time practice in pediatric emergency nursing care • Direct care, health care facilitation, education, and advocacy for pediatric emergency patients and their families Required • 1,000 hours in pediatric emergency nursing practice as an RN in the past24 months • A current, active, unrestricted RN license in the U.S. or Canada

  12. Eligibility Examples • Full-time employment as an emergency nurse in a pediatric emergency setting for 6 months, or • Full-time employment as an emergency nurse in a mixed-age emergency setting for 2 years with a population of approximately 20% pediatric patients, or • Part-time employment as an emergency nurse in a pediatric emergency setting, for example, 20 hours per week for 1 year, or • Any other combination of practice involving direct care, health care facilitation, education, and advocacy for pediatric patients and their families for a total of 1,000 hours in the past 24 months.

  13. Eligibility FAQs Q: Do I need a BSN to take the exam? A: No. You can hold a diploma, associate’s degree, bachelor’s, or master’s degree in nursing. Q: If I have 1,000 hours of experience before I reach the 24-month point, do I have to wait to apply? A: No. This timeframe just makes sure the experience is recent. Q: What counts for clinical practice hours? A: Providing direct care, health care facilitation, education, and advocacy for patients and families.

  14. 1 Exam Content Outline Preparation Resources 2 CPEN Reference List 3 CPEN Exam Prep 4 Test-taking Strategies Modules

  15. CPEN Content Outline • Consists of six major content areas: • Lists percentage of questions in each subject matter area • Access the detailed content outline here

  16. CPEN Exam • 175 multiple-choice questions • Tests your ability to apply knowledge and think critically • Goal is to determine one best answer among choices • For current pass rates, visit the BCEN website or the PNCB website.

  17. Reference List • A list of respected texts • Consider using one textbook with which you’re familiar • Not inclusive of all resources that could be used • Access the reference list here What texts are available where you work? Are funds available to create a study library?

  18. CPEN Prep Exam Optional online practice test developed by BCEN and PNCB • 50 questions • Shows how questions are presented • Includes the rationale for answers • Score report can show weak areas and help you focus your studies Not a study or review course. Seethe prep exam webpagefor current pricing.

  19. Test-taking Strategies Module Optional online learning activity developed by PNCB • Exam preparation tips • Strategies for answering multiple-choice exam questions • Techniques to manage test anxiety Not a study or review course. See PNCB’s website for current pricing.

  20. Preparation FAQs Q: Do I have to take a review course? A: No, BCEN and PNCB do not require that you take a review course. We can’t endorse a review course, but BCEN lists classes as a courtesy here. Q: Does PNCB or BCEN offer a review book or course? A: No. Doing so would be a conflict of interest, especially if a candidate failed the exam after paying for a PNCB or BCEN review. Q: Can BCEN or PNCB recommend the best text? A: We can’t endorse specific texts or review courses, but we recommend using onepediatric emergency nursing textbook with which you’re familiar. Tip! Know colleagues who recently passed? Ask what texts or other resources they found most helpful.

  21. 1 Apply Online with AMP Steps in Applying & Testing 2 Schedule Exam with AMP 3 Take the Exam at AMP

  22. How do I apply? Allow 15 minutes to complete the online application. Have your RN license info handy. • Go to the Applied Measurement Professionals (AMP) website. • Click “Candidates.” • Select category, program, and exam. • Enter requested information. • Basic info about you • RN licensure • Education and employment • Pay the exam fee. Tip! You will need to take your exam within 90 days of applying. Be sure you’re ready to schedule your test within that timeframe when you submit the application.

  23. Eligibility Notification This is your green light to schedule your exam! • You can set your exam date, time, and location at the time of application or • Schedule your test after AMP notifies you by email and postcard that your application is approved • Check your spam/junk folder for this important email. Important timing information: You receive a 90-day testing window soon after applying: • You must schedule your test date and sit for the exam during that timeframe.

  24. Scheduling Your Exam • Soon after eligibility notification, visit Applied Measurement Professionals online to schedule your testing day and time. • Changing or cancelling test dates is managed by AMP. • A 90-day extension is available from AMP for a fee. Tip! Even before you apply, find the closest testing center to you at AMP’s website.

  25. Test Administration • You will test at a proctored AMP Testing Center. • More than 200 locations across the U.S. • 3 hours testing time • 175 multiple-choice questions • You’ll be offered a tutorial on using the computer. • Pass/fail status received before leaving the center (official mailed results within 3 weeks)

  26. What to Expect Watch a 5-minute video about scheduling and testing with Applied Measurement Professionals: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYUFF-Sux28

  27. Test Administration Tips • Arrive at least 30 minutes early. • Bring the 2 required, unexpired IDs matching your name on your application. • Download your Candidate Handbook for explanations of all policies, including what can and cannot be brought in with you. • You are allowed to take breaks, but they count as part of your testing time.

  28. Testing FAQs Q: Is the CPEN exam like the NCLEX? A: While there are similarities (e.g., testing on a computer in a secure, proctored environment), there are also differences. The CPEN exam asks only multiple-choice questions, while NCLEX contains alternate item formats (fill in the blanks, hot spot items, etc.). With the CPEN exam, you can also return to questions and change an answer before final submission. The CPEN exam does not use adaptive testing, which can vary the number of questions a candidate sees, and ends when competence is determined. The CPEN exam does not end until 3 hours are up, or unless you submit answers before that time limit.

  29. More Testing FAQs Q: Is there a penalty for incorrect answers? A: No, so it is better to answer every item rather than skip any items. Q: How is the exam scored? A: The number of questions that must be answered correctly to pass is decided by a psychometrician and an expert panel of CPENs. Each question is evaluated for difficulty. Each test form is analyzed for the passing cut point. Your ability to pass the examination depends on the knowledge and skill you display, not on the performance of other candidates.

  30. After the Exam Candidates who pass • Receive pass packet by mail in 3 weeks • Celebrate your achievement! • Wear your lapel pin • Frame your certificate • Let your leadership know • Use BCEN’s online Publish Credential service • Opt-in to BCEN’s online Public Registry • Ask CPEN to be added to your name badge • Get familiar with the recertification process Candidates who are unsuccessful • Score report mailed in 2-3 weeks • Reduced fee to retest • 90-day waiting period to retest

  31. Celebrate & Recognize! Visit the PNCB or BCEN websites for… • T-shirts • Badge appliques • Plaques • Download a sample press release • Print out a Wall of Distinction poster

  32. Maintaining Certification All certification boards require a renewal process. CPEN recertification documents that you’re keeping practice and knowledge current. CPENs recertify every 4 years. • The testing company (AMP) will contact you with reminders. • Learn what counts for your recertification here.

  33. Questions? Visit our websites or contact us for assistance: AMP online.goamp.com 888-519-9901 BCEN www.BCENcertifications.org 877-302-BCEN PNCB www.pncb-cpen.org 888-641-2767 ?

  34. Free Resources • Unit meetings? • Skills fairs? • Certified Nurses Day or Nurses Week events? Order free materials here

  35. Thank you! BCEN and PNCB thank you for the difference you make for children in your ED. We wish you much success in your future professional development!

More Related