
You've been doing the work. The exam stopped counting it.
You know the floor. You know the vitals. You know which patients need watching before the chart says so.
That's not CNA work. That's RN instinct. And you've had it for years.
One exam score is the only thing that still disagrees.
Here's what nobody told you: the 2026 TEAS science section is not the exam your guide prepared you for.
A&P dropped by 14 questions. Chemistry doubled. Molecular Biology went up 125%.
The students who walked out of the 2026 exam and posted about it said the same thing:
"Mine had very little A&P, but a lot of chemistry and scientific reasoning."
— JacksonFiery87, r/teas
"My questions were 80% chemistry. Not even basic atom structures. More like hope you have the entire periodic table memorized."
— mabver321, r/teas
Every hour you spent on A&P while the real exam tested buffer systems and dihybrid crosses — that time didn't count toward your score.
You didn't study the wrong way. You studied the wrong exam.
The ATI manual. Mometrix. Nurse Cheung. The NurseInTheMaking bundle. The Etsy PDF with 400 pages and a 2026 sticker on the cover.
Every one of them was built before the shift. Every one of them built false confidence going in.
The Insurance Policy was built from 47 real 2026 test-taker reports — after the shift. Not rebranded. Built from scratch, for the test you're actually walking into.
If you think you're "just not a science person" — read this first.
Every student who walked out of the 2026 exam and posted about chemistry shock said the same thing: they studied, they put in the hours, they weren't lazy.
They got blindsided because the exam tested chemistry — and their prep didn't cover it.
That's not an intelligence gap. That's an information gap.
The student who scored 95.3% hadn't taken science since high school. The student who went from 68.7% to 86.7% on her retake wasn't smarter the second time. She covered different material.
You're not falling behind because of who you are. You're falling behind because of what you've been given to study.
What You'll Learn
📊 The 2026 Science Beast Audit
Exactly which 27 questions control your composite score. Stop wasting time on the rest.
🧪 The Chemistry First Framework
Every confirmed 2026 Chemistry concept — taught through memory hooks. No background needed.
🧬 The Molecular Biology Logic Maps
The depth the 2026 exam actually tests. Not the footnote version legacy guides give you.
⚠️ The SGE Error Correction System
Three confirmed errors in popular prep guides — fixed before you memorize the wrong answer.
📅 The 30-Day Insurance Calendar
A day-by-day plan built to the real 2026 question distribution. Every session has one job. It's the right one.
✦ The Complete Competitive State Blueprint
The exact score you need, in your state, to be the accepted applicant — not the waitlisted one.
They studied. They still got blindsided.
These aren't reviews. These are real r/teas and r/cna posts from students who walked out of the 2026 exam in shock. The chemistry shift was real. The guides they used didn't cover it.
Two things we hear every time. Here's the truth.
I'm not good at Chemistry. Will this actually help me?
I'm not good at Chemistry. Will this actually help me?
The students who got blindsided by the 2026 chemistry questions weren't bad at science. They were studying the wrong topics.
The Insurance Policy maps 27 confirmed 2026 chemistry concepts — pulled from real test-taker reports after the shift. You don't need a chemistry background. You need to know what's actually on the test.
One student went from a 55.9% in science on her first practice run to a 95.3% composite on exam day. She hadn't taken science since high school.
You don't need to become a chemistry person. You need a map of what's on this specific exam.
I already use Nurse Cheung. Do I still need this?
I already use Nurse Cheung. Do I still need this?
Nurse Cheung built her content before the 2026 science shift. She's said so herself.
Students who used her exclusively in 2026 reported the same thing: she's good for a quick recap, but she doesn't go deep enough for what's on the test now. The r/teas community confirmed it after sitting the exam: "I just want to say that Nurse Cheung will not save you."
If your science score is already above 85%, you don't need this. If it's not, Nurse Cheung got you as far as she can.
The Insurance Policy covers what she doesn't: the 2026 chemistry topics, the Molecular Biology Logic Maps, and the error correction system for the specific wrong answers built by studying pre-2026 materials.
Use both. Just don't bet your exam on one guide that was built for a different year.
BONUS: FREE Science Shift Audit Included
You could open the Insurance Policy on page one and still waste your first three study sessions on the wrong thing.
Most guides don't tell you where to start. This one comes with a Fast-Start companion that does.
Inside:
- The 2026 Weighting Shift Table — the exact data on what changed in the Science section, so every study decision starts on solid ground
- The SGE Correction System — three errors documented in popular prep guides, fully corrected, so you never memorize a wrong answer
- The Fast-Start Sequence — exactly which part of the Insurance Policy to open first, and in what order
The right guide opened in the wrong order is still the wrong prep.
30-Day Score Improvement Guarantee
Go through the system. Apply the 30-Day Insurance Calendar.
If you don't see a measurable improvement in your Science section score — show us your completed Calendar and we'll refund every dollar.
The Chemistry First Framework is designed to move your practice test scores within 7 days. If you follow the system and don't see improvement, we'll make it right.
No games. No hassle. Just results or your money back.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are there no reviews?
Why are there no reviews?
This guide launched in 2026 — built specifically for the 2026 exam. Reviews take time to collect. What we have instead are verified, unedited Reddit posts from real test-takers who sat the 2026 exam. You can find every source we cite by searching the subreddit directly. We didn't manufacture trust. We went to where students were already talking and listened.
Is this actually updated for the 2026 TEAS 7, or is it just rebranded?
Is this actually updated for the 2026 TEAS 7, or is it just rebranded?
Not rebranded. Built from scratch. We pulled 47 verified reports from students who sat the 2026 exam. We mapped the exact shift in question distribution — Chemistry doubled, Molecular Biology increased 125%, A&P dropped from 32 questions to 18. Every section of the Insurance Policy reflects that shift. There is no 2023 content recycled here.
How is this different from the official ATI manual?
How is this different from the official ATI manual?
The ATI manual is comprehensive but not prioritized. It covers everything at roughly equal depth, which means a student using only the manual has no way to know that Chemistry questions doubled while A&P dropped by 14 questions. The Insurance Policy is a priority system — it tells you exactly where your study time creates the highest score return.
My test is in 10 days. Is it too late?
My test is in 10 days. Is it too late?
No. The first 7 days of the Calendar focus on the highest-yield topics. It's designed for speed.
I already failed once. Will this work?
I already failed once. Will this work?
Most fail because they studied the wrong topics (Anatomy). This corrects your focus to the 2026 weighting so you don't repeat the mistake.
Your exam date isn't moving.
The Chemistry questions are already written. The Science Beast is already on the test.
The only thing that changes between now and exam day is whether you're studying the right 27 topics or the wrong ones.
Every guide you've already tried was built for a test that no longer exists.
This one wasn't.
If you've studied before and it didn't stick — this is why. And this is the fix.