The blueprint, exactly
Every question mapped to a 2025 NCCPA content × task cell. We over-index the eighteen-percent diagnosis task and never run harder than the real exam — the complaint students level at everyone else.
PANCE · EOR · EOC · PANRE — the clinical codex
That kind of certainty isn't a feeling — it's a measurement. PrepModePA reads your readiness the way an anatomist reads a body: precisely, and in the open. A calibrated PANCE pass-probability, and the exact blueprint cells standing between you and it.
Drawn to the 2025 NCCPA blueprint · seven rotations · every item verified by a clinician
Musculoskeletal reads lowest against its exam weight — the needle rises most if you mend it first.
Folio II — the argument
Ask any PA student's confession: they finished the question bank and still had no idea if they'd pass — panicking at a classmate's "100% complete." Completion counts effort. It has never predicted passing. Readiness does.
The old way
"I finished it… but am I ready?"
A completion bar. Weak topics buried in raw percentages. A peer-pressure metric that quietly feeds burnout.
The instrument
"88% likely to pass — mend these three cells to reach 94%."
Grounded in the peer-reviewed record: End-of-Rotation ↔ PANCE correlation r = 0.856; a ten-point rotation gain lowers the odds of PANCE failure by 37–48 percent.†
Folio III — the instruments
Every question mapped to a 2025 NCCPA content × task cell. We over-index the eighteen-percent diagnosis task and never run harder than the real exam — the complaint students level at everyone else.
Seven End-of-Rotation banks that double as PANCE preparation — because clinical-year scores are the surest omen of first-try success. No more studying in silos.
A transparent pass-probability with a confidence band, and your weakest cells ranked by drag. An instrument you can read — never a vanity completion bar.
Multi-sentence clinical vignettes that force second- and third-order reasoning — the shape the modern PANCE actually rewards, now that buzzwords have left the exam.
Missed cells return on an interval tuned to your own forgetting curve, interleaved across systems so recall holds under the pressure of exam day.
Answer-changes, time per question, accuracy by system — the granular record serious students want, drawn plainly, without the noise.
One workspace
Sign in and everything lives in one clean dashboard: your live readiness, the cells dragging it down, and one-tap into practice, mock exams, cases, flashcards, guides, and Remy — your AI mentor.
Folio IV — the mentor
A warm, razor-sharp AI mentor who thinks in cases — not flashcards. Remy explains the why behind every miss, adapts to your weak blueprint cells, and talks like the senior PA you wish you had on every shift.
A leaf from the margin — inferior STEMI
I keep choosing heparin for inferior STEMIs. Why is that wrong?
You're not wrong to anticoagulate — you're skipping a step. An inferior STEMI is the right coronary in about four of five, and that artery often feeds the right ventricle.
So before nitrates or aggressive anticoagulation — what must you rule out? Think about what makes this patient preload-dependent.
he waits. he won't hand it over.
…Right-ventricular infarction. A right-sided ECG.
There it is. V4R. If the RV is involved, nitro can bottom them out. That instinct is exactly what the exam tests — and it's your second-weakest cell this week. Five to lock it in?
Folio V — drawn from the record
peer-reviewed predictive validity
per ten-point rotation gain
the ~8.5% we are built to protect
not the outdated 2019 weights rivals use
† Cody et al., J Physician Assist Educ; PAEA End-of-Rotation predictive-validity studies (PubMed 26244469, 31652194).
Folio VI — admission
No shell game of a $270 question bank or a $350 course. No paying twice for rotations and boards. A single membership, every instrument, from your first rotation to the morning of the exam.
Elsewhere: ~$600 to bundle bank and course; rotations sold apart.
Here: one plan. All of it.
Full access. No card. Founding students lock in launch pricing for good.
Join the founding cohort of PA students who prepare with a readiness they can actually read.