Finished the ADAP program through my community college in March and sat for the California state board exam last week. Passed on the first attempt and I'm still kind of in shock — I was really nervous going in. The written portion went fine, but I'd heard horror stories about the clinical component and I was bracing for the worst.
I started doing an ADAP practice test about 3 weeks before my exam date, once I'd finished the core coursework. My initial scores were around 68%, which wasn't great, but I used the results to identify exactly which content areas needed more work — infection control procedures and radiography safety standards were my two weakest spots. I ran through practice questions nearly every day for the last 2 weeks and by the end I was consistently hitting 85–88%.
The clinical skills component was actually less intimidating than the stories made it sound. The evaluators were professional and I didn't feel like they were trying to catch me out. What helped most was running through the clinical procedures with my lab partner in the week before — probably 4 sessions of about 90 minutes each. Getting the coronal polish setup and breakdown sequence into actual muscle memory was worth more than any amount of reading.
One specific tip: don't skip the California-specific regulations content. There are questions unique to state law — scope of practice limitations, supervision requirements — that aren't covered in generic ADAP prep materials. I almost didn't study that section and I'm glad my instructor reminded me.
Congrats! The California-specific regulations piece is so true. I took mine in Texas and when a friend was prepping for California she was shocked by how much additional state-specific content there was. The scope of practice rules especially are way more detailed than what I had to know for my state exam.
I'm 6 weeks out from my exam in California and the clinical component is exactly what's keeping me up at night. Good to hear it's manageable. Was there a specific part of the coronal polish the evaluators focused on most, or were they watching the whole sequence equally?
Radiography safety standards got me on my first attempt too. The radiation protection questions are deceptively specific — it's not enough to know the general rules, they want the specific exposure limit numbers and distance requirements. Make sure you have those memorized cold before you sit.
The jump from 68% to consistently 85–88% on practice tests is the right way to use that material — diagnose first, then drill the weak spots specifically. Most people just practice the content they already know and don't actually move the needle on their score.