The Test of Essential Academic Skills (TEAS) is a standardized entrance exam administered by the Assessment Technologies Institute (ATI).
The Reading Comprehension section is the first part of the TEAS exam and requires sharp focus and precise time management.
Number of Questions: 45 total questions (39 scored items and 6 unscored pre-test items).
Time Limit: 55 minutes (giving you approximately 1.2 minutes per question).
Question Types: Primarily multiple-choice, along with multiple-select (select all that apply) and ordered response formats.
Passing Score: There is no single, universal passing grade, as each nursing school sets its own cutoff.
The reading subtest assesses your analytical and interpretive skills across three primary categories:
Key Ideas and Details (15 scored questions): Identifying the main idea of a passage, summarizing complex texts, extracting specific supporting details, making logical inferences, and accurately following multi-step directions.
Craft and Structure (9 scored questions): Determining the author's purpose and point of view, distinguishing between objective facts and subjective opinions, understanding text structure, and using context clues to decipher unfamiliar vocabulary.
Integration of Knowledge and Ideas (15 scored questions): Evaluating the validity of an author's argument, comparing and contrasting themes across multiple sources, and interpreting primary data from charts, graphs, and other visual representations.
Successfully passing the TEAS exam and excelling in the reading section is your first step toward securing a seat in a clinical program and launching a rewarding career in healthcare. Earning your degree or certification opens the door to numerous high-demand roles, including:
Registered Nurse (RN): Providing direct patient care, administering medications, coordinating treatment plans, and educating patients in hospitals, clinics, or private practices.
Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) / Licensed Vocational Nurse (LVN): Assisting with essential patient care, monitoring vital signs, and supporting medical teams under the supervision of RNs and physicians.
Allied Health Professionals: Depending on your specific educational track, TEAS scores are often required for admission into programs for dental hygiene, occupational therapy assisting, physical therapy assisting, and radiologic technology.
Advanced Practice Roles: A successful foundation in nursing allows you to pursue advanced degrees later in your career to become a Nurse Practitioner (NP), Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA), or Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS).