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.
Act I · The near shore
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.
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.
Act II · The exam
You answer
Every response updates a per-domain ability score, weighted by how hard the item was and how sure you were.
It finds the gap
The engine locates your lowest-rated domains and the NGN formats where your errors cluster.
It redirects you
Your next session pulls disproportionately from exactly there — you never have to decide what to drill.
You watch it climb
Each domain shows a live mastery percent, so the weak number becomes the number that moves.
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.
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.
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.
One payment, every retry
Access until you pass — retries included, no recurring bill, no surprise add-ons. Exact numbers live on the pricing page.
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.
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 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.