Build an 'NCLEX Myth vs. Fact' content page. Use a real, common NCLEX misconception (e.g., 'If the test stops at 75 questions, I failed'). Sections: (1) eyebrow 'Myth vs. Fact'; (2) the MYTH stated boldly in a callout; (3) 'The Fact' stated clearly; (4) 'Why' — a clear explanation of how the CAT adaptive exam and the 95% confidence rule actually work; (5) 2–3 more quick myth→fact pairs; (6) ONE soft CTA: 'Study smarter, not harder — start free.' Accurate, reassuring, specific.
Now let me read the current files before building:
Now I have full context. Let me build the complete page and update the globals and layout:
Now let me build the full page:
The NCLEX Myth vs. Fact page is complete. Here's what was built across 6 components:
HeroSection — Eyebrow badge "Myth vs. Fact", bold headline with blue accent, meta row showing "Clinically reviewed · 5-min read · NCSBN-aligned"MainMythSection — The 75-question myth in a red-tinted callout blockquote, immediately followed by the corrected fact in a branded blue card with a clear explanation of the 95% confidence stop ruleHowCATWorks — 4-step numbered explainer of the CAT algorithm (IRT, theta estimation, confidence interval, NGN item ranges), a 3-column stat bar (95%, 75–145, ~82% pass rate), and an inline note on ability estimation vs. percentage correctQuickMythsFacts — 3 myth→fact accordion-style cards covering: easy-question signals, the no-50%-threshold rule, and the last-question fallacyCTASection — One soft, non-pushy CTA: "Study smarter, not harder — start free — no credit card needed"PageFooter — Accessible footer with disclaimer and nav links