The Nurse Bridge
0% · building the span
Maria, an internationally educated nurse, hopeful and determined in a bright hospital corridor
For licensed nurses · NCLEX-RN & Québec OIIQ

Manila to Canada. One bridge. One exam.

You have already done the hard part — you became a nurse. What stands between you and the floor of a Canadian hospital is one exam, in a second language, in an unfamiliar format. This is the bridge across it: an algorithm that finds your gaps and spends your study time for you.

0Philippine-educated candidates sat the NCLEX-RN in 2024
0first-attempt pass rate for internationally educated candidates
0first-attempt pass rate for US-educated candidates — the gap we close
Filipino nursing students studying together in a bright Manila classroom Act I · The near shore
Where you are

The gap is rarely the medicine.

Internationally educated nurses pass at roughly 52% on the first attempt, against roughly 85% for US-educated candidates. You did not forget how to nurse on the flight over. The points leak somewhere else: an exam written in a format you have never drilled, questions timed against readers who think in English, a scoring model that punishes hesitation you would never show at a bedside.

The Nurse Bridge scores every answer on three separate axes, so a missed question stops being a lower percentage and becomes a specific thing you can fix.

Knowledge Format English speed
The crossing

Every answer teaches the engine where you are weak.

This is the core of the platform, not a bolt-on. Each drill answer updates a live ability rating for that clinical domain. A confident correct answer on an easy item moves the needle a little; a correct answer on a hard item you were shaky on moves it a lot — the same logic adaptive tests use. Then the engine does the thing a question bank never does for you: it decides what you study next.

Adaptive item bank Every NGN format Live per-domain rating
A nurse studying exam material at her desk in warm evening light Act II · The exam
01

You answer

Every response updates a per-domain ability score, weighted by how hard the item was and how sure you were.

02

It finds the gap

The engine locates your lowest-rated domains and the NGN formats where your errors cluster.

03

It redirects you

Your next session pulls disproportionately from exactly there — you never have to decide what to drill.

04

You watch it climb

Each domain shows a live mastery percent, so the weak number becomes the number that moves.

Your dossier

A readiness signature, drawn in percent — not a vague "you're doing great."

Every nurse gets a per-domain mastery figure, an overall readiness percent, and improvement-in-points since day one. Here is an illustrative read — watch where the algorithm decides to spend the next week of your time.

Readiness dossier · illustrative
Overall readiness 0
Provisional · not an exam prediction
Pharmacology strong — hold it here0%
Physiological adaptation steady0%
Priority & delegation redirect target0%
Select-all-that-apply format first redirect target0%
Three-axis signature

This week the engine pushes toward select-all-that-apply items and priority & delegation first — the two lowest numbers on the board — and leaves your strong pharmacology alone until it needs a touch-up.

All figures are provisional and based on your diagnostic plus ongoing drill history. They describe your practice, not your official exam outcome.
The far side is the promise

Pay once. We stay with you until you pass.

Career-long access means exactly that: one payment — or a sponsored seat if an employer or program funds it — and the platform stays with you through every retry, with no extra fees if your first attempt does not go your way.

Individual · career-long

One payment, every retry

Access until you pass — retries included, no recurring bill, no surprise add-ons. Exact numbers live on the pricing page.

Sponsored · $0 to you

If someone funds your seat

When an employer, health system, or nursing program sponsors you, you get the same career-long entitlement at no cost — no card, no invoice. Ask about the sponsor program.

Headed to Québec?

Québec doesn't use the NCLEX

The same grading and percent-progress engine runs against the OIIQ exam structure, plus an OQLF French-readiness lane.

See the Québec track →
A nurse arriving in Canada with her suitcase, warm and hopeful
Act IV · Arrival

See your starting point in five minutes.

25 items, no signup, no credit card — a provisional three-axis read, and your first look at where the algorithm would begin redirecting your study time. The bridge starts wherever you are standing.