Master the NGN: A Comprehensive Guide to Next Generation NCLEX Item Styles (2026 Edition)
If you are a nursing student or a nurse preparing for the NCLEX in 2026, you’ve likely heard the buzz about the Next Generation NCLEX (NGN). Since its launch in April 2023, the exam has shifted away from simple rote memorization toward measuring clinical judgment.
In 2026, the NGN continues to refine how it evaluates entry-level nurses. To succeed, you must understand not just the medical content, but the specific NGN Item Styles - the innovative question formats designed to simulate real-world bedside nursing.
In this ultimate guide, we will break down every item style, the scoring models you need to know, and how to approach these questions to pass your boards on the first try.
Why the NGN Style Matters?
- Recognize Cues (What matters most?)
- Analyze Cues (What does it mean?)
- Prioritize Hypotheses (Where do I start?)
- Generate Solutions (What can I do?)
- Take Action (What will I do?)
- Evaluate Outcomes (Did it work?)
The Core NGN Item Styles
Unlike the traditional multiple-choice questions of the past, NGN items are interactive. Most of these appear within Case Studies (unfolding scenarios), but many also appear as Standalone Items.
1. Extended Multiple Response
This is the NGN’s evolution of the "Select All That Apply" (SATA) question.
- The Format: You may see up to 10 options.
- The Challenge: Unlike old SATA, you might have to select a specific number of responses, or any number of responses could be correct.
- Pro Tip: In 2026, these are scored using Partial Credit (specifically the +/- model), which is a huge win for students.
2. Matrix/Grid Items
Matrix questions ask you to evaluate multiple pieces of information against a set of criteria.
- Matrix Multiple Choice: You must select one option per row (e.g., Is this finding "Expected" or "Unexpected"?).
- Matrix Multiple Response: You can select multiple checkboxes per row or column (e.g., Which interventions are indicated for Patient A, Patient B, or both?).
3. Drag-and-Drop (Cloze & Ordered Response)
These items require you to move "tokens" or phrases into specific areas of a sentence or a list.
- Cloze Drag-and-Drop: You fill in the blanks of a nursing note or a summary statement.
- Ordered Response: You might rank nursing actions in order of priority.
- Note: In the NGN, you don't always have to use all the tokens provided.
4. Drop-Down (Cloze)
Similar to drag-and-drop, but you select the best answer from a list within a sentence.
- The Format: "The nurse should first assess the client's [Drop Down 1] and then prepare to administer [Drop Down 2]."
- The Strategy: These often test Rationale Scoring, meaning the two parts are linked. You must understand the "Cause and Effect" to get full points.
5. Highlight Items (Enhanced Hot Spot)
Instead of clicking a single spot on an image, you are given a passage of text (like a provider’s note or a shift report).
- The Task: You must click on specific words or phrases that represent "concerning findings" or "evidence of improvement."
- The Trick: Don't over-highlight! Because of the +/- scoring, highlighting every sentence will result in a score of zero.
6. The Bowtie Item
The Bowtie is the "ultimate" NGN standalone item because it tests almost all six layers of clinical judgment at once.
- The Structure: * Centre: The primary condition/problem.
- Left Side: Two actions to take.
- Right Side: Two parameters to monitor.
- Visualizing it: It literally looks like a bowtie on your screen. You drag five total tokens into the correct spots.
7. Trend Items
Trend items provide data over time (e.g., vital signs at 08:00, 10:00, and 12:00).
- The Goal: You must identify if a patient is improving, deteriorating, or staying the same based on the trend of the data, not just a single snapshot.
| Scoring Model | How it Works | Best For... |
| 0/1 Scoring | All or nothing. You get a point for a correct answer, zero for wrong. | Multiple Choice, Drop-down (Single). |
| Plus/Minus (+/-) | You get +1 for correct, -1 for incorrect. Minimum score is 0. | SATA, Highlighting, Matrix Multiple Response. |
| Rationale Scoring | Linked points. If part A is wrong, part B doesn't count. | "Due to" statements, Bowtie (partially). |
3 Strategies for Success in 2026
1. Master the EHR (Electronic Health Record)
NGN questions almost always include tabs: History & Physical, Nurses' Notes, Vital Signs, and Lab Results. Action: Practice toggling between tabs. If a lab value looks off, check the History & Physical to see if it’s "normal for that patient" (e.g., a high CO2 in a COPD patient).
2. Don't Over-Select
In Highlight and Multiple Response items, only select what you are 100% sure of. Because of the +/- scoring, a "lucky guess" that turns out wrong will cancel out a correct answer you worked hard for.
3. Think in "Action-Result"
When facing a Drop-down or Bowtie item, ask yourself: "If I take this action, what is the specific result I am looking for?" This helps you pair the intervention with the correct monitoring parameter.
Conclusion
The NGN Item Styles might seem intimidating at first, but they are actually designed to reward the way you already think in clinical rotations. By moving away from "all-or-nothing" scoring and focusing on unfolding patient stories, the 2026 NCLEX provides a fairer, more realistic assessment of your skills as a nurse.
Ready to start practicing? The best way to conquer NGN styles is through exposure. Use high-quality resources that offer "unfolding case studies" and detailed rationales for every item style mentioned above.
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