The Vermont Department of Health
Computer-Based Testing for EMT Students
Vermont EMS and the National Registry of EMTs
October 2006
The Vermont Department of Health
Change is Coming
Computer-Based Testing (CBT) is new and will mean a number of changes for:• students• course coordinators• Vermont EMS Office staff• the National Registry.
The Vermont Department of Health
Please be patient as we refine this new process. Results for you:• next-day exam results• more flexible exam scheduling• quicker turnaround on NREMT cards• quicker turnaround on VT cards
The Vermont Department of Health
Registration Results How Computer-Adaptive Testing is Different
for Students Testing Sites and Fees Pilot Test Results
The Vermont Department of Health
Registration
About a month before your course ends, you will create an account on the NREMT web site and complete an application for EMT-B certification.
The Vermont Department of Health
Registration
At the end of the course, your course coordinator will sign onto the site and verify you have completed the course
The Vermont Department of Health
Registration
The Vermont EMS Office will sign onto the NREMT web site and verify you:• are eligible for certification and• have passed the practical exam.
Only AFTER all these steps are completed will you receive a card from the NREMT.
The Vermont Department of Health
Registration
The NREMT will electronically provide VTEMS with the information from your application, speeding up your VT certification.
The Vermont Department of Health
Results
You will get your test results emailed to you the day after you take your test.
The Vermont Department of Health
Results
Instead of a numerical score, you will get one of three descriptions for the overall test and each section on the test:• above the standard • near the standard• below the standard
The Vermont Department of Health
Since the computer selects items based on how well you do, you should expect the exam to be difficult
EVEN IF YOU’RE THE SMARTEST PERSON IN THE CLASS
How Computer-Adaptive Testing is Different
The Vermont Department of Health
How CAT is Different
Expect to feel challenged, even wrung-out after the exam.
THIS IS NORMAL.
The Vermont Department of Health
Testing Sites & Fees
Testing sites available in Vermont:• Pearson Testing Center, S Burlington• VT Police Academy, Pittsford
Testing sites available nearby:• Littleton, NH• Keene, NH• Concord, NH• Albany, NY area (3 sites)
The Vermont Department of Health
Testing Sites & Fees
Pearson Vue and NREMT charge $70 for someone to take the EMT-B exam.
VTEMS plans to pay for one attempt for each Vermont student.
A student will have to pay for any retest.
The Vermont Department of Health
Testing Sites & Fees
Pearson does not give refunds, so if you schedule a time and cannot make it, re-schedule. If you miss the appointment, you will have to pay for the next one.
The Vermont Department of Health
Pilot Test Results
Students didn’t know they were going to be challenged, so they felt bad after the test, ESPECIALLY THE BETTER STUDENTS.
Keep in mind: Toward the end of the exam, the vast majority get 50% of the questions right.
The Vermont Department of Health
Pilot Test Results
394 students took pilot test in multiple states EMT-B pass rate was 76.9% Number of questions:
First Responder
EMT-Basic
Minimum 70 70
Maximum 90 120
The Vermont Department of Health
Pilot Test Results
More than 95% of students who finished in minimum number of questions passed.
Average time on the EMT-B pilot test was 45 minutes. The longest time was 110 min. Maximum allowed time is 2 hours.
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