Description
ARRT Magnetic Resonance Imaging Prep Course (ARRT MRI)
ARRT MRI candidates, including radiographers and MRI learners preparing for entry-level MRI technologist readiness for the ARRT postprimary Magnetic Resonance Imaging certification exam. Key goals: By the end of this course, learners will be able to:; Explain the broad ARRT MRI content areas and how each lesson maps to exam-relevant domains, objectives, and subskills without relying on unpublished blueprint details..
Exam: ARRT Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) postprimary certification exam · Organization: ARRT
Includes: Lessons + Flashcards + QBank
Audience: ARRT MRI candidates, including radiographers and MRI learners preparing for entry-level MRI technologist readiness for the ARRT postprimary Magnetic Resonance Imaging certification exam.
Goals:
- By the end of this course, learners will be able to:
- Explain the broad ARRT MRI content areas and how each lesson maps to exam-relevant domains, objectives, and subskills without relying on unpublished blueprint details.
- Master high-yield MRI concepts, definitions, safety rules, patient care principles, imaging procedures, anatomy/pathology recognition, image formation concepts, pulse sequence behavior, parameter tradeoffs, artifacts, and quality assurance topics commonly tested at entry-level MRI technologist scope.
- Apply MRI concepts in realistic exam-style scenarios involving safety screening, contraindication/precaution evaluation, patient preparation, protocol selection, coil and positioning choices, parameter adjustment, artifact troubleshooting, image quality evaluation, and workflow judgment.
- Solve MRI logic and calculation-style problems accurately when applicable by showing stepwise reasoning, especially for parameter effects on SNR, contrast, spatial resolution, scan time, coverage, and artifact management.
- Distinguish common distractors, misconceptions, and boundary cases frequently tested in MRI exam prep, including artifact mix-ups, sequence confusion, safety nuances, and role-boundary decisions.
- Use a consistent problem-solving framework: identify the task → extract key facts → select the governing MRI principle, safety rule, or procedural standard → execute → verify image quality, safety, or next step.
- Build retrieval-ready memory using concise tables, protocol checklists, artifact comparison grids, anatomy summaries, and spaced rapid-review recaps.
- Demonstrate readiness through self-check questions and mini-assessments mapped to broad MRI content domains and explicit subskills.
- Coverage & Blueprint Mapping Requirements:
- Every chapter/section/subsection/topic must map to at least one exam-relevant domain/objective/subskill tag.
- Use consistent tags in the format: DOMAIN: Objective -> Subskill.
- Because official blueprint wording may be broad, translate it into teachable MRI subskills such as safety screening, patient care, imaging procedures, anatomy/pathology recognition, image formation, pulse sequences, parameters and tradeoffs, artifacts and image quality, quality assurance/equipment concepts, and workflow/professional decision-making.
- Ensure complete coverage: no broad MRI content domain is left unmapped.
- Stay within the role and scope of the entry-level MRI technologist candidate; do not invent unpublished ARRT weightings or unsupported official structure.
- When practices vary by institution, protocol, or vendor, use learner-safe wording such as: “Local protocols vary; confirm with your institution.”
Access is granted immediately after purchase.




