- Identify weak areas
- Timed practice sessions
- Detailed answer explanations
60+ questions | Updated for 2026
Answer a few NCLEX-style questions to experience realistic timing, feedback, and explanations before you start.
60+ ATI RN Community Health Practice Questions included with any Keslaly Premium Plan.
Hear how real students used realistic practice, progress tracking, and study plans to feel test-ready.
Get comfortable with NCLEX-style items, manage the 60‑minute pace, and improve to an ATI proficiency level with targeted practice and clear feedback.
Practice select-all-that-apply and other ATI-style items so you can focus on clinical reasoning—not the format.
Rehearse the 60-minute pace with exam-like navigation, flags, and timing tools to reduce test-day stress.
Get more accurate feedback on multi-answer questions so you can refine judgment and improve proficiency-level performance.
Understand why each option is right or wrong to strengthen community health decision-making and avoid repeat errors.
Find your starting point fast and prioritize study time where it will most improve your ATI proficiency level.
Automatically focus practice on the question patterns and concepts you miss most to build consistent accuracy.
ATI RN Community Health questions can feel challenging because they test both clinical judgment and prioritization under time pressure. Keslaly helps you build readiness through realistic practice, clear explanations, and data-driven study focus—so you know what to work on before test day.
Prepare for the ATI RN Community Health with 60-question timed practice built to sharpen accuracy and pacing. Pick the access length that matches your schedule and study intensity.
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A computer-based ATI assessment that measures your readiness for community and population-focused nursing practice.
The ATI RN Community Health is a computer-based (CBT) nursing assessment that checks how well you can apply community health concepts in realistic, NCLEX-style scenarios. You’ll typically see multiple-choice questions, including select-all-that-apply and other item formats, in an exam that’s commonly estimated at about 60 questions in 60 minutes.
This exam is most often taken by RN students and professionals in ATI-aligned programs who need to demonstrate proficiency in community and public health nursing. Many schools use ATI proficiency levels (Level 1–3) to report performance, with Level 2 proficiency or higher often considered the target for readiness.
It matters because your result can influence course outcomes, remediation requirements, and your overall preparation for clinical decision-making in community settings. Strong performance also signals that you can prioritize safety, prevention, and appropriate interventions across populations—not just individual patients.
Preparation is important because the exam is moderate to challenging and rewards consistent practice under time pressure. Focused question-based learning helps you get comfortable with ATI-style wording, improve accuracy, and identify weak areas early so you can study more efficiently before test day.
Expect a computer-based ATI proctored assessment with mostly multiple-choice questions and a timed session.
Know what to expect on test day—question types, timing, scoring, and common challenge areas.
The ATI RN Community Health assessment is delivered as a computer-based test (CBT) through ATI, typically proctored by your school (in-person or online, depending on your program). You’ll usually see about 60 questions in around 60 minutes (estimated), so pacing matters. The exam is primarily multiple choice, but you should also expect NCLEX-style items such as select-all-that-apply and other alternate formats that test clinical judgment and prioritization.
Questions are designed to reflect real community and population-focused nursing decisions—what you should do first, which finding is most concerning, and how to apply prevention and safety principles across settings. Your result is reported using ATI proficiency levels (Level 1–3) based on percent-correct compared to ATI norms; many programs look for Level 2 proficiency or higher as a benchmark, so accuracy and consistency across content areas both matter.
Get quick answers to common questions about the exam format, scoring, and how to practice effectively.