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100+ Free NE Psych Juris Practice Questions

Pass your Nebraska Psychology Jurisprudence Examination exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.

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100+ Questions
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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: NE Psych Juris Exam

70%

Passing Score

NE Board

36h/2yr

CE Required

Biennial renewal

§38-3101

Practice Act

NE Statutes

ASAP

Abuse Report

Reporting deadline

No RxP

Prescriptive Authority

Not authorized

The NE Psychology Jurisprudence Exam covers the Uniform Credentialing Act, Board of Psychologists authority, mandatory reporting of child and vulnerable adult abuse, duty to warn, privileged communication, 36h/biennium CE requirements, and DHHS regulations.

About the NE Psych Juris Exam

The Nebraska Psychology Jurisprudence Examination tests knowledge of the Psychology Practice Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. §38-3101 to 38-3133), scope of practice, mandatory reporting, confidentiality, privilege, telehealth regulations, supervision, and APA ethics under Nebraska law.

Questions

100 scored questions

Time Limit

Varies

Passing Score

70%

Exam Fee

Varies by application (Nebraska Board of Psychologists (DHHS))

NE Psych Juris Exam Content Outline

30%

Nebraska Psychology Practice Act

§38-3101 to 38-3133, Uniform Credentialing Act, Board authority, licensing, disciplinary actions

25%

Professional Ethics & Conduct

APA ethics under NE law, dual relationships, informed consent, boundaries, sexual misconduct laws

20%

Confidentiality & Privileged Communication

Duty to warn, mandatory reporting, psychologist-client privilege, exceptions, HIPAA compliance

15%

Scope of Practice & Competence

Practice boundaries, no prescriptive authority, telehealth, supervision, cultural competence

10%

Assessment & Testing Standards

Test administration, forensic evaluations, custody assessments, cultural considerations

How to Pass the NE Psych Juris Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 70%
  • Exam length: 100 questions
  • Time limit: Varies
  • Exam fee: Varies by application

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

NE Psych Juris Study Tips from Top Performers

1Study the Nebraska Psychology Practice Act (§38-3101 to 38-3133) and the Uniform Credentialing Act
2Master mandatory reporting obligations for child abuse and vulnerable adult abuse under Nebraska law
3Know the duty to warn standard and exceptions to psychologist-client privilege in Nebraska
4Understand Nebraska's 36h biennial CE requirements including ethics and jurisprudence mandates
5Review telehealth regulations, PSYPACT provisions, and DHHS supervision standards

Frequently Asked Questions

What topics are covered on the NE Psychology Jurisprudence Exam?

The Nebraska exam covers the Psychology Practice Act (§38-3101 to 38-3133), Board of Psychologists authority, licensing, scope of practice, mandatory reporting, confidentiality, privilege, ethics, supervision, and telehealth.

What are Nebraska's CE requirements for psychologists?

Nebraska requires 36 hours of continuing education every two-year renewal cycle, including specific hours in ethics and Nebraska jurisprudence.

Does Nebraska require psychologists to report child abuse?

Yes, Nebraska psychologists are mandatory reporters under the Child Protection and Family Safety Act and must report suspected child abuse as soon as reasonably possible to DHHS or law enforcement.

What is Nebraska's duty to warn standard for psychologists?

Nebraska psychologists must take reasonable steps to warn or protect a reasonably identifiable victim when a client communicates a serious threat of physical violence against that person.