(Questions 1-75)
1. A nursing student is studying personal financial planning. The student correctly
identifies that the main goal of personal financial planning is to:
A) Maximize current spending on wants and desires
B) Accumulate as much wealth as possible regardless of risk
C) Manage money to achieve personal economic satisfaction
D) Eliminate all debt within five years
Answer: C
Rationale: Personal financial planning is the process of managing your money to achieve
personal economic satisfaction. This allows you to control your financial situation rather
than being controlled by it. While saving and debt reduction may be components, the
overarching goal is achieving satisfaction with your financial position, not just
accumulation (B) or spending (A). Debt elimination (D) may be a specific goal but is not
the primary overall purpose of financial planning.
Domain: Financial Planning Fundamentals
Cognitive Level: Remember
Integrated Process: Teaching/Learning
2. A recent college graduate is starting their first job. According to the financial planning
process, what should be their FIRST step?
A) Implement a savings plan
B) Determine their current financial situation
,C) Create an investment portfolio
D) Evaluate and revise their actions
Answer: B
Rationale: The first step of the financial planning process is to determine your current
financial situation. This involves analyzing income, expenses, assets, debts, and existing
financial plans. You cannot develop meaningful goals or strategies without knowing
where you currently stand. Implementation (A) and evaluation (D) come later in the
process. Creating an investment portfolio (C) would be premature without first assessing
current finances and setting goals.
Domain: Financial Planning Fundamentals
Cognitive Level: Understand
Integrated Process: Nursing Process: Assessment
3. A student is deciding between attending graduate school full-time or starting work
immediately. They calculate that choosing graduate school means giving up two years
of salary. This trade-off is best described as:
A) Opportunity cost
B) Inflation adjustment
C) Liquidity preference
D) Risk tolerance
Answer: A
Rationale: Opportunity cost is what you give up when making a choice. In this case, the
opportunity cost of attending graduate school is the two years of salary that could have
been earned. Inflation adjustment (B) refers to changes in purchasing power over time.
Liquidity preference (C) refers to the desire to hold cash or easily convertible assets. Risk
tolerance (D) is the degree of uncertainty an investor is willing to accept.
Domain: Financial Planning Fundamentals
,Cognitive Level: Understand
Integrated Process: Decision-Making
4. A young professional wants to save $12,000 for a down payment on a home within 24
months. They currently have $3,000 saved. Approximately how much do they need to
save each month to reach their goal (assuming no interest)?
A) $250
B) $375
C) $500
D) $625
Answer: B
Rationale: To calculate the monthly savings needed: Target ($12,000) minus current
savings ($3,000) = $9,000 needed. $9,000 divided by 24 months = $375 per month.
Option A ($250) would only save $6,000 total. Option C ($500) would save $12,000 in
addition to the current $3,000, exceeding the goal. Option D ($625) would save $15,000,
also exceeding the goal.
Domain: Financial Planning Fundamentals
Cognitive Level: Apply
Integrated Process: Calculation
5. Which of the following goals would be the EASIEST to implement and measure its
accomplishment?
A) "Reduce our debt payments"
B) "Save funds for an annual vacation"
C) "Save $100 a month to create a $4,000 emergency fund within 40 months"
D) "Invest for retirement"
, Answer: C
Rationale: The goal "Save $100 a month to create a $4,000 emergency fund within 40
months" is the most measurable and actionable because it includes a specific amount
($100), a specific time frame (monthly), and a specific target ($4,000 within 40 months).
Option A lacks specific amounts and timeline. Option B lacks specific savings amounts.
Option D has no specific amounts, timeline, or target. Well-written financial goals should
be SMART: Specific, Measurable, Action-oriented, Realistic, and Time-bound.
Domain: Money Management & Budgeting
Cognitive Level: Analyze
Integrated Process: Teaching/Learning
6. A married couple with two children is creating financial goals. Which would be
classified as a LONG-TERM goal?
A) Saving for a vacation next month
B) Paying off a credit card balance within 6 months
C) Setting aside funds for their young children's college education (18 years away)
D) Building a 3-month emergency fund over the next year
Answer: C
Rationale: Long-term goals typically take more than 5 years to achieve. Saving for young
children's college education is a long-term goal (10-18 years). Short-term goals (A, B)
take less than 1 year. Intermediate goals (D) take 1-5 years.
Domain: Financial Planning Fundamentals
Cognitive Level: Understand
Integrated Process: Teaching/Learning