Anyone else studying for CLT in the next month? Want to study together
Taking my (CLT) Clinical Laboratory Technologist Certification exam in 4 weeks and trying to find people at a similar stage to keep each other accountable.
I study better when I have someone to compare notes with. Currently going through "CLT" and working on my weak areas — specifically around CLT exam.
My schedule: 90 min of focused study every weekday, full practice test on weekends. I review every wrong answer and try to understand the why, not just memorize the right option.
If you're in a similar prep window and want to:
- Compare practice test scores weekly
- Share resources that actually helped
- Talk through confusing questions
Reply here or message me. Doesn't have to be formal — even just checking in once a week helps me stay on track.
Where is everyone at in their prep?
If you're looking for a starting point, the free clt clinical laboratory techniques procedures is worth trying — the questions closely match what you'll see on test day.
Passed CLT 7 months ago. Happy to share what I remember.
On the "CLT exam" stuff specifically — I found the practice tests here were actually harder than the real exam on those questions. Which was great because going in I felt more prepared than I needed to be.
The time pressure is real though. I came in with maybe 8 minutes to spare and that was after skipping the ones I wasn't sure about and coming back.
Don't try to cram the night before. Seriously. Last-minute stress makes you second-guess things you actually know.
The advice about understanding why wrong answers are wrong — not just memorizing right ones — is genuinely the best CLT advice in this thread. Rebuilt my prep around that and it made a real difference.
For anyone finding this later: CLT is passable with consistent effort even working full time. I studied 41 minutes a day for 11 weeks. The free clt laboratory equipment operation maintenance kept me honest about my actual gaps.
Four weeks is actually a decent runway if you're already identifying weak spots — that's the hard part for most people. I was in a similar spot a few months ago, leaning hard on hematology and immunohematology because my clinical rotation didn't give me much bench time in those areas. What clicked for me was drilling questions that forced me to explain why an answer was wrong, not just flagging the right one. This clt practice test site became kind of a daily habit for me — the questions felt close to the actual exam style, and working through the rationales helped me stop second-guessing myself on things like differential counts and coagulation pathways.
The accountability piece is real though. I had a study partner for maybe two of my four weeks and honestly those two weeks were the most productive. We'd each take a timed set independently then compare which questions tripped us up. Totally different weak areas, which meant we were teaching each other instead of just nodding along at the same stuff. If you want to try something like that I'm down — I just retook a practice set last week to prep for a different cert track so I'm in that headspace anyway.
Biggest thing I'd say: don't ignore urinalysis and body fluids just because they feel "easy." That's where I dropped points I shouldn't have.
Related Discussions
- Just passed my CLC exam — here's what actually helped6 replies
- Got my CMLA 6 months ago — the salary difference actually surprised me6 replies
- Which section of the CSMLS is hardest? My breakdown after taking it5 replies
- Did getting CLT certified actually change your job/salary? My experience5 replies
- Got my CLIA cert 6 months ago — here's what actually changed at work5 replies