Finally passed SHS last month — here's what actually made the difference for me

by FirstAttempt_S 240 views4 replies
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FirstAttempt_SOP
June 15, 2026

Okay so I've been lurking on this forum for about six months and feel like I owe it to everyone who helped me to actually post something useful. I passed my SHS back in May and honestly the relief was unreal. I had failed it once before, about eight months ago, and came back here looking for literally anything that would tell me what I was doing wrong.

The biggest thing that changed my second attempt was being way more intentional about where I spent my study time. First time around I just read through the material and figured that was enough. It wasn't. What actually worked was drilling specific topic areas — the shs occupational safety standards & regulations section tripped me up hard on my first attempt, and I underestimated it completely. Second time I spent probably three times as long on that area specifically. The question types are tricky. They're not just recall — you really have to understand the reasoning behind the rules.

For exam prep I leaned heavily on practice questions. Like, embarrassingly heavy. I did the shs test resources multiple times and kept notes on every question I got wrong. Not just the answer — the WHY. That habit honestly changed everything. When you see a similar scenario on the real exam and you've already worked through the logic once, it clicks so much faster.

One thing nobody told me: time pressure is real. The practice test environment gets you used to pacing, but the actual exam day nerves will eat your clock if you're not prepared for it. I started flagging and moving on way more aggressively during my second attempt instead of getting stuck on one question for five minutes. That alone probably saved me ten questions worth of time at the end.

If you're in the middle of prep right now and it feels impossible, it's probably not your knowledge — it's your strategy. Figure out which domains are costing you points and go deep there instead of reviewing stuff you already know. That's the switch that got me through it.

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BoothcampGrad_R
June 15, 2026

Man, this post hit different. I failed my first attempt back in 2024 and the worst part wasn't even the failing — it was not really understanding why I failed. I walked out thinking I'd done okay, maybe borderline, and then got the score and it wasn't even close. Turns out I had completely underestimated the health services administration questions and basically coasted on the clinical content because that felt more familiar to me. Classic mistake.

What I changed the second time was being brutally honest about where my weak spots actually were versus where I felt weak. Those aren't the same thing. I'd been spending 70% of my study time on stuff I already kind of knew because it was comfortable. The second time I forced myself to do timed practice sets broken out by domain and then sat with the ones I consistently missed. Also stopped cramming the night before — I did a full rest day and that sounds obvious but I genuinely think it mattered for the more scenario-based questions where you have to actually think rather than just recall a fact.

Congrats on passing in May. Eight months between attempts is a long time to stay motivated, and the fact that you came back and posted this instead of just disappearing says a lot. The people still in the thick of studying needed to read something like this.

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CramSession
June 15, 2026

The thing that finally clicked for me was stopping full practice tests cold turkey about three weeks before my date. I know that sounds backward, but I switched to drilling individual domains in timed 20-question blocks instead. That way when I bombed a set on, say, the regulatory stuff, I knew exactly where the gap was — not just that I "struggled in the second half" of some 150-question marathon. Way easier to actually fix something specific.

Also started keeping a wrong-answer log in a plain notebook. Not flashcards, not an app — just a spiral notebook where I'd write out the question stem, why I picked what I picked, and then the actual reasoning behind the correct answer in my own words. Sounds tedious and it is, honestly. But writing it out forced me to actually process it instead of just nodding at the explanation and moving on. By week two I had maybe 80 entries and I was re-reading them every morning with coffee. Probably the single highest-ROI thing I did.

The first time I sat for it I crammed everything. Second time I was almost surgical about it. Night-and-day difference in how calm I felt walking in.

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ExamAce_T
June 15, 2026

Congrats on passing — and yeah, failing it once first is honestly more common than people admit on here. I was in basically the same boat. My weak spot was the occupational safety standards and regulations section, which I kept underestimating because I figured it was just memorization. It's not. The questions twist the wording in ways that trip you up if you've only read the regs once and moved on.

What actually clicked for me was drilling practice questions specifically on that material rather than rereading the same pages over and over. I found this set of shs occupational safety standards & regulations questions that were formatted close to what the real exam throws at you — not just definition recall but application-type stuff. Did a timed run, saw exactly which topics I was guessing on, then went back to the source material with actual targets instead of just vibing through it. Night and day difference on my second attempt.

The emergency action plan questions and the hierarchy of controls stuff in particular — I kept second-guessing myself until I'd seen enough variations of those scenarios to recognize the pattern. If that section is where you're losing points, that's the piece I'd focus on. Good luck to everyone still grinding through it.

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PracticeTestFan
June 16, 2026

Congrats on passing — and yeah, that relief hits different when you've already failed it once. I passed mine about two years ago now, and the hindsight piece nobody really talks about is how much the first attempt teaches you even though it feels like pure failure at the time. What I got wrong the first time was treating it like a knowledge test when it's really more of a reasoning test. The SHS isn't asking you to recall a fact — it's asking you to apply judgment under time pressure, and those are genuinely different skills.

The thing that actually moved the needle for me was drilling scenarios until the decision-making felt automatic. Not just reviewing questions I got wrong, but understanding why the wrong answers were constructed the way they were — they're not random, they're designed to catch specific misunderstandings. Once I started seeing the pattern in the distractors, my accuracy jumped. Also, and I can't stress this enough: the time pressure is real. My first attempt I ran out of time on the last section. Second attempt I treated pacing as its own skill to practice.

Two years out, the stuff I thought was going to be hard turned out not to matter much, and the stuff I glossed over (mostly the procedural and documentation sections) was what actually showed up repeatedly. If you're still in prep mode, weight those areas heavier than feels intuitive. The content that seems dry is usually the content they lean on hardest.

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