ARRT Radiography Prep Course (ARRT Rad)

$150.00

ARRT Radiography candidates preparing for initial certification in radiography, including students in accredited radiography programs, recent graduates, and examinees needing a structured, exam-focused review of patient care, safety, image production, equipment and quality concepts, radiographic procedures, and positioning. Key goals: By the end of this course, learners will be able to:; Explain the major ARRT Radiography content areas and how each lesson maps to exam-relevant domains and subskills without assuming unpublished weighting details..

Includes: Lessons + Flashcards + QBank

Exam: ARRT Radiography · Organization: ARRT

SKU: MEDEXP-COURSE-8494 Category: Brand:

Description

ARRT Radiography Prep Course (ARRT Rad)

ARRT Radiography candidates preparing for initial certification in radiography, including students in accredited radiography programs, recent graduates, and examinees needing a structured, exam-focused review of patient care, safety, image production, equipment and quality concepts, radiographic procedures, and positioning. Key goals: By the end of this course, learners will be able to:; Explain the major ARRT Radiography content areas and how each lesson maps to exam-relevant domains and subskills without assuming unpublished weighting details..

Exam: ARRT Radiography · Organization: ARRT

Includes: Lessons + Flashcards + QBank

Audience: ARRT Radiography candidates preparing for initial certification in radiography, including students in accredited radiography programs, recent graduates, and examinees needing a structured, exam-focused review of patient care, safety, image production, equipment and quality concepts, radiographic procedures, and positioning.

Goals:

  • By the end of this course, learners will be able to:
  • Explain the major ARRT Radiography content areas and how each lesson maps to exam-relevant domains and subskills without assuming unpublished weighting details.
  • Master high-yield concepts, definitions, rules, and image-evaluation criteria across Patient Care, Safety, Image Production, Equipment and Quality Concepts, and Radiographic Procedures/Positioning.
  • Apply concepts in realistic ARRT-style scenarios, including procedural judgment, positioning/projection selection, image critique, safety decisions, and multi-step reasoning within the entry-level radiographer role.
  • Solve calculation and logic tasks accurately when applicable, showing steps and using cause-and-effect reasoning rather than memorized shortcuts.
  • Distinguish common distractors, misconceptions, artifacts, positioning errors, technical-factor tradeoffs, and boundary cases frequently tested in radiography exam prep.
  • Use a consistent problem-solving framework: identify the imaging task or safety issue -> extract key patient/procedure facts -> select the governing radiographic rule or principle -> execute the best next step -> verify image quality, safety, positioning, and appropriateness.
  • Build retrieval-ready memory using concise tables, projection comparisons, checklists, anatomy/procedure summaries, and spaced-review recaps.
  • Demonstrate readiness through self-check questions and mini-assessments mapped to each content area and explicit subskill tags.
  • Coverage and blueprint mapping requirements:
  • Every chapter, section, subsection, and topic must map to at least one explicit content-area/subskill tag using a consistent pattern such as AREA: Topic -> Subskill.
  • Use public ARRT Radiography-style content areas translated into teachable subskills, including at minimum: Patient Care, Safety, Image Production, Equipment and Quality Concepts, and Radiographic Procedures/Positioning.
  • Ensure complete coverage across all major content areas; do not leave any domain or objective family unmapped even when blueprint language is broad.
  • For procedures content, map lessons to anatomy/procedure family plus projection selection, positioning, image evaluation, and error-recognition subskills as appropriate.
  • Keep all content within the entry-level radiographer candidate role; do not introduce provider-level diagnosis or treatment-planning expectations.
  • If a protocol detail varies by institution or equipment, use learner-safe wording such as: "Local protocols vary; confirm with your institution." Do not guess or invent specific institutional standards.
  • Do not invent hidden ARRT blueprint granularity, scoring rules, or weighting percentages; when specificity is unavailable, provide complete practical coverage and clearly structured subskill mapping.

Access is granted immediately after purchase.