A Community of Exceptional Nurses
Login
|
My Account
|
About Us
|
Community
|
Find a Chapter
|
Contact Us
|
Help
Home
Membership
Join Now
Value of Belonging
Member Benefits and Savings
Awards
Certification
Apply Online
Renew Your Certification
Verify Certification
Documents and Handbooks
Select Your Program
Prepare to Take Your Exam
Value of Certification
About AACN Certification Corp
General Information
Consumer Information
Education
NTI-National Teaching Institute & Critical Care Exposition
Nurse Manager Priorities Conference
Progressive Care Pathways Conference
E-Learning
Continuing Education
Other Education Events
CE Program Approval
Continuing Professional Development Scholarships
AACN CSI Academy
Webinar Series
Clinical Practice
Beacon Awards
CINAHL Journal Search
Ethics
Evidence-Based Resources
Clinical Toolkits
Grants
Practice Resource Network
Practice Alerts
Standards
Health Policy
Healthy Work Environments
Palliative and End-of-Life Care
Staffing
Marketplace
Online Bookstore
Specials & Clearance Items
New Products
Revisions & Upcoming Titles
Bestsellers
Shopping Cart
AACN Certification Reviews Online
Job Search - NursePath.com
Publications
AACN Advanced Critical Care
American Journal of Critical Care
AACN Bold Voices
Critical Care Nurse
eNewsletter
NTI Voices
Career Options
Books
Search
Certification
Apply Online
Renew Your Certification
Verify Certification
Documents and Handbooks
Select Your Program
CCRN
CCRN-E
PCCN
CMC
CSC
ACNPC
ACNPC-AG
CCNS
ACCNS
CNML
Prepare to Take Your Exam
Value of Certification
About AACN Certification Corp
General Information
Consumer Information
Share
Upholding the Value of Certification — What AACN Certification Corporation Does
Seek and Maintain Certification Exam Accreditation
AACN Certification Corporation creates exams with accreditation standards as a guide. Accreditation of our exams is obtained through the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA).
Assure Exams are Psychometrically Sound and Legally Defensible
Conduct periodic studies of practice to make sure exams are evidence-based.
Select qualified, clinically current, RN item writers who hold the appropriate credential for the exam for which they are writing. Item writers represent the diversity of target practitioners for the exam.
Train item writers on how to eliminate unintended cues and bias when writing exam items.
Validate all items with at least one current textbook that is widely available to candidates.
Approve all items at 100-percent consensus with a national panel of content experts - RNs who hold an appropriate credential. Panelists agree that each item tests the correct knowledge area and relates to specific content on the Test Plan. The panel ensures there is only one correct answer and all distractors are plausible but factually incorrect. Panelists have different experiential levels, including recent certification - so they understand the experience of target practitioners for the exam.
Use the Angoff method to rate item difficulty based on target practitioners to help ensure we equate different test forms for difficulty.
Pretest items to determine how well target practitioners will perform on the exam.
Work with our testing service, Applied Measurement Professionals, Inc. (AMP) to continuously analyze all exams.
Review all exam candidate comments and feedback from their testing experience.
Automatically recheck candidates' exam scores if they do not pass by one point.
Assure Confidentiality and Honor Statements are Signed
All certification and customer care staff sign confidentiality agreements.
All volunteers involved in exam development sign confidentiality agreements.
All candidates sign honor statements agreeing that they:
understand the importance of ethical standards
will act in a manner congruent with the ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses
will keep exam content confidential.
Make Exam Information Available to the Public
Exam handbooks contain detailed content outlines (Test Plans), percentage weightings and study bibliographies listing textbooks used by item writers to validate correct answers.
Audit New and Renewing Candidates
A certain percentage of new and renewing certificants are audited on a random basis to verify clinical hours, RN or APRN license status and continuing education (CE/CERP) requirements.
Deliberate Using an Internal Review Panel
An internal review panel decides on outlier situations that may result in requests for additional information, audits or recommendations for alternate status options or revocation of certification.
If the panel does not reach an agreement, we turn to an external Appeals Panel and/or the Board of Directors for review and decisions.
Monitor Use of Credentials
Mail a certified cease and desist letter, as a legal warning, to those identified as using a credential inappropriately.
Consult with those who may be using a credential inappropriately, such as CCRN, CMC (it should be CCRN-CMC, separated by a dash).
Determine potential action regarding those who use a credential but do not meet the eligibility requirements.
Maintain an internal policy, where we investigate allegations of inappropriate use of credentials and decide if we need to take action. If you report an allegation, please note that we do not report back to you regarding the case and, we keep your name and communication confidential.
Upholding the Value of Certification — What AACN Certification Corporation
Does Not Do
We differentiate between a national certification exam and a teaching tool and
do not
:
Discuss item-specific exam content with candidates.
Provide feedback to candidates about items they answered incorrectly.
Provide rationale for correct or incorrect answers.
Use active exam items as samples in handbooks or practice exams.
AACN Certification Corporation
does not
plan or offer exam review courses. Exam information is made available to the public in our exam handbooks, which are accessible online at no charge.
To limit exam item exposure, we do not allow nurses who fail an exam to test more than 4 times in a 12-month period.
We
do not
allow certified nurses (e.g., those who teach review courses) to take an exam at any time other than their next scheduled renewal time.
We
do not
allow nurses who hold Inactive, Retired or Alumnus status to use these designations on their name badge or on the credential line of their business card or resume. (Alumnus CCRNs and PCCNs may use this title
below
their name on a business card or resume and in professional social media profiles such as LinkedIn.)
Return to Upholding the Value of Certification page
Your Feedback