Dosage Calc Quiz
500 questions across the calculation types nursing students see in fundamentals, skills lab, clinicals, and on the NCLEX. Two free categories, the rest unlocked with a one-time Premium upgrade.
Three quiz apps for iPhone and Android, with hundreds of practice questions per subject. Two free categories in every app, with the remaining categories unlocked through a one-time Premium upgrade — no subscriptions, no recurring charges.
The apps are designed for the way nursing students actually study — five minutes here, fifteen minutes there, between classes and shifts. Question banks live on your device, so you can practice in basement clinical sites, on planes, or anywhere your phone goes. Progress syncs the next time you reconnect.
Every question is written by Dr. Zapencki. Every rationale explains not just the right answer but the reasoning that leads to it — because the goal isn't to memorize the answer key, it's to build the judgment to recognize the pattern next time.
Dosage Calc, Clinical Judgment, and Pharmacology are all available on the App Store and Google Play. The Prioritization & Delegation app is in submission and will follow shortly.
500 questions across the calculation types nursing students see in fundamentals, skills lab, clinicals, and on the NCLEX. Two free categories, the rest unlocked with a one-time Premium upgrade.
602 questions organized around the six steps of the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model. Practice cue recognition, hypothesis testing, action selection, and outcome evaluation in the same case-based format the NCLEX uses.
600 questions across six categories of nursing pharmacology — drug classes, mechanisms, side effects, nursing considerations, and high-alert medications. Designed for repeated practice across the program, not one-time review.
Submitted to the App Store and in closed testing on Google Play. Expected to launch shortly. Sign up for the newsletter on the guides page to be notified the day it goes live.
Each app has a companion workbook covering the same material in a deeper, written format. Most students who use both find the combination teaches faster than either format alone.