atitesting.com

What ATITesting.com is

ATI Testing is the online presence of Assessment Technologies Institute, LLC (ATI) and primarily supports nursing education and allied-health exam preparation. (Main)
Tools and resources include practice exams, tutorials, study guides, registration for standardized assessments (like the ATI TEAS — Test of Essential Academic Skills), and support for programs preparing for the NCLEX. (Main)

What the website offers

Here are some of the key services and features:

  • A store where students (or institutions) can purchase preparation packages: e.g., for the TEAS exam — “Comprehensive Package”, “Basic Package”, practice tests, study guides, mobile apps. (Main)

  • Tutorials and modules for nursing-content areas: pharmacology, anatomy & physiology, med-surg, fundamentals, leadership, etc. (Main)

  • Registration and scheduling of standardized exams (e.g., TEAS). For example, one college’s handout says students are required to create an account on ATI, register for the TEAS via the online store, and pay the fee. (monroeccc.edu)

  • Support for remote/online proctored testing and resources for institutions shifting to online teaching or blended learning. (atinursing.com)

  • Tools for instructors/educators: measuring student engagement, integrating modules into LMS, simulation replacements for clinical hours. (atinursing.com)

How it works (for a student)

From the material I found, here’s a rough flow of how a student might use the site:

  1. Create an account. You go to atitesting.com, click “Create Account,” supply username/password, personal info, institution info, demographic info. (canton.edu)

  2. Log in. Use your username and password on their portal.

  3. Select what you need. Example: if you’re prepping for the TEAS, you’d look at the “TEAS Prep” section and choose a package or practice test. (Main)

  4. Register / purchase if required. If the exam is administered through ATI, you schedule, pay the fee, pick a testing location or remote proctor option. Example: one institution says “visit atitesting.com to register for the TEAS exam.” (North Central Texas College)

  5. Use study/prep materials. E.g., review modules, take tutorials, use flashcards, etc.

  6. Take assessment/test. For example, for TEAS: one hand-out gave details that there are about 170 multiple-choice questions, time limits, etc. (monroeccc.edu)

  7. Receive results / transcripts. Your scores will appear in your account; institutions may receive official transcripts. (monroeccc.edu)

Strengths & things to like

  • Specialized: The site is targeted to nursing/allied-health students and institutions, so the content is quite focused rather than generic.

  • Integrated: It covers both the exam registration side and the study-prep side, so you can both take the test and prepare for it under one roof.

  • Institutional support: Schools and programs can use its tools for online learning, measuring engagement, simulation modules, etc. That means it can fit into curriculums, not just individual learners.

  • Clear steps: The guidance for account creation and test registration is fairly explicit (for example, the PDF hand-outs show steps). That is helpful for new users.

Limitations / things to watch

  • Cost: Many of the prep packages and exams come at a fee (as usual for such services). For example, the TEAS exam registration is not free. (monroeccc.edu)

  • Access & prerequisites: You likely need to create an account and perhaps have institutional affiliation or select an institution in the registration process. The account creation forms ask for “Institution” and “Non-degree seeking” boxes. (canton.edu)

  • Validity limits: For example, one page notes TEAS scores are valid for 24 months from date of test. (North Central Texas College)

  • Interface or usability: I didn’t do a full hands-on test, but for users not familiar with educational testing sites, the navigation of store vs modules vs registration might have a learning curve.

  • Scope: If you’re not in nursing or allied health, this site may not be very relevant; it’s quite focused on those domains.

Who should use it

  • Students planning to enter nursing programs (undergrad or possibly graduate) who need to take exams like TEAS or prepare for NCLEX or similar.

  • Students in allied health fields (since TEAS is used broadly for health-science program admission).

  • Nursing educators and administrators who need tools to support curriculum, measure student outcomes, provide modules/simulations and integrate remote assessments.

  • Schools that want to outsource or use a platform for their admissions tests and preparatory modules, rather than develop everything in-house.

Key takeaways

  • ATI Testing is a platform for exam registration (especially TEAS) and study-prep for nursing/allied health.

  • It handles both the commercial store side (prep materials) and institutional side (assessment, simulation, remote proctoring).

  • Users must create accounts, select their institution, and then purchase/register for resources or exams.

  • It’s useful if you’re heading into health science programs and need structured preparation and official testing.

  • Cost and access requirements apply — it’s not entirely free.

  • Institutions can leverage ATI as a partner tool rather than only a standalone product.

FAQ

Q: If I’m not in nursing or allied health, is this site useful to me?
A: Likely less so. The primary focus is on health science admissions, nursing education, clinical prep etc. If you’re in a different field (engineering, business, arts) there will be fewer relevant modules.

Q: How much does the TEAS exam cost via ATI?
A: It depends by institution and testing center. One hand-out mentioned a fee of $95 for the TEAS at one college. (monroeccc.edu) Another site listed $127 at a particular institution. (sites.highlands.edu) So you’ll want to check your school or testing center for the exact fee.

Q: How long are my scores valid once I take the TEAS through ATI?
A: In one example, the scores are valid for 24 months from date of test. (North Central Texas College) Your institution may have stricter rules, so always verify with them.

Q: Can I take the TEAS exam remotely or online via ATI?
A: Yes — ATI offers remote online proctoring for some exams as part of their products. (Main) But you’ll need to check with your specific institution or exam registration if remote option is available.

Q: What kind of study materials does ATI provide for prep?
A: They provide study guides (print or eBook), online practice tests, tutorials for content areas like pharmacology, anatomy & physiology, mobile apps, flashcards, etc. (Main)

Comments