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Your search for "princeton review" produced 152 results
See apps for: The Princeton Review, The Princeton Review or Board Review
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Mosby's Review Questions for the NCLEX-RN® Exam: Childbearing and Women's Health is a powerful quiz building and assessment application designed to help nursing students maximize the efficiency and effectiveness of their test prep. Carry nearly 600 subject-specific Q&A and short-answer style questions in the palm of your hand for anywhere, anytime studying.
Browse questions by category, select a pre-set quiz or design a custom question set to drill yourself on the content you need to know. Tap the screen to submit your answers or work in the Reference mode, with correct answers to each question automatically displayed. Each question features detailed rationales and difficulty rankings to provide broader context for pre-test quiz performance. Built-in assessment tools track your progress on every question, providing cumulative stats that highlight areas of mastery and those requiring further review.
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Mosby's Review Questions for the NCLEX-RN® Exam: Mental Health is a powerful quiz building and assessment application designed to help nursing students maximize the efficiency and effectiveness of their test prep. Carry nearly 600 subject-specific Q&A and short-answer style questions in the palm of your hand for anywhere, anytime studying.
Browse questions by category, select a pre-set quiz or design a custom question set to drill yourself on the content you need to know. Tap the screen to submit your answers or work in the Reference mode, with correct answers to each question automatically displayed. Each question features detailed rationales and difficulty rankings to provide broader context for pre-test quiz performance. Built-in assessment tools track your progress on every question, providing cumulative stats that highlight areas of mastery and those requiring further review.
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Mosby's Review Questions for the NCLEX-RN® Exam: Pediatric is a powerful quiz building and assessment application designed to help nursing students maximize the efficiency and effectiveness of their test prep. Carry nearly 600 subject-specific Q&A and short-answer style questions in the palm of your hand for anywhere, anytime studying.
Browse questions by category, select a pre-set quiz or design a custom question set to drill yourself on the content you need to know. Tap the screen to submit your answers or work in the Reference mode, with correct answers to each question automatically displayed. Each question features detailed rationales and difficulty rankings to provide broader context for pre-test quiz performance. Built-in assessment tools track your progress on every question, providing cumulative stats that highlight areas of mastery and those requiring further review.
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4/20/2009 by Press Room, Modality
Modality and The Princeton Review Bring SAT® Vocab Challenge to iPhone™ and iPod touch®
New York, NY.,--April 20, 2009--The Princeton Review and Modality, Inc. today announced The Princeton Review’s SAT® Vocab Challenge application is available on the Apple App Store. This iPhone™ and iPod touch® app is a college admissions exam resource that measures a user’s mastery of 250 words, including The Princeton Review’s Hit Parade, a list of 100 words that most frequently appear on the SAT.
“Vocabulary building is one of the easiest, most effective ways to improve an SAT score, but it requires time and discipline on the part of the student,” according to Robert Franek, VP/Publisher of The Princeton Review. “The revolutionary iPhone and iPod touch have enabled us to strip away the typical barriers to study so students can carry hundreds of need-to-know words with them everywhere they go, and challenge themselves with fast-paced drills for a meaningful study session, whether they have five free minutes or an entire weekend.”
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2/4/2010 by Dr. Jessica Otte, Dr. Ottematic
You can almost smell the formaldehyde! Lippincott Williams & Wilkins and Modality Inc. have put together, exclusively for iPhone, a collection of cadaver dissection anatomy flash cards. Included in the app are 211 full-colour photos, based on the printed atlas by Joel Vilensky, Rohen’s Color Atlas of Anatomy: A Photographic Study of the Human Body, Sixth Edition.
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12/5/2009 by Dr. Jessica Otte, Dr. Ottematic
In my Residency program, we have a 3 week rotation specifically in Musculoskeletal (MSK) things; most of this time is spent at the office of a local Orthopaedic Surgeon (“orthopod”) who does not do major surgeries but rather many physical examinations and small procedures like joint injections and aspirations. We also spend time at the cast clinic with the orthopods and plastic surgeons, practice reading plain films in radiology, and spend time with a sports medicine doc in town. This means lots of procedures!
Don’t let the “Internal Medicine” part of the title throw you – there aren’t a lot of General Internists who would be doing these procedures on a regular basis. More likely, Rheumatologists (a sub-specialty of Internal Medicine concerned with disease of the joints and connective tissues), ER docs, small town GPs, sports medicine specialists, and orthopedic surgeons will be the ones sticking needles into joints; and ER doctors will be the ones reducing dislocations and splinting things. However, on occasion, other types of physicians may need to aspirate a possibly septic joint on the ward, throw on a splint on something, or reduce a painful dislocation before referring a patient to another caregiver.