Interview prep
CNA Interview Questions
Prepare for CNA interviews by turning your resume into short, specific answers about reliability, skills, schedule fit, and how you handle real situations.
Common questions
Common CNA interview questions
How do you protect patient dignity?
Mention privacy, respectful language, explaining care, and choice when possible.
What would you do if a resident fell?
Follow facility policy, call for help, do not move them unless instructed, document facts.
How do you manage a busy shift?
Prioritize safety, call lights, scheduled care, and communication with nurses.
Resume talking points
Answers you can build from your resume
Pick two or three examples before the interview so you are not inventing answers under pressure.
- Assisted residents with ADLs while protecting dignity, privacy, and safety.
- Took and reported vital signs, patient changes, and care concerns to nursing staff.
- Supported safe transfers, mobility, and fall prevention during daily routines.
- Followed infection control procedures and maintained clean patient care areas.
Prep checklist
Before your CNA interview
- 1.Review the job post and circle the top three requirements.
- 2.Prepare one short story that proves reliability.
- 3.Prepare one example that shows how you handle pressure, customers, patients, guests, or teammates.
- 4.Know your real availability before the schedule question comes up.
- 5.Bring questions about training, schedule, team expectations, and next steps.
Answer style
How to make answers sound specific
Situation
Give one sentence of context so the interviewer knows what was happening.
Action
Describe what you personally did, using the same kind of words the job post uses.
Result
End with the result: faster service, fewer mistakes, safer work, calmer customer, cleaner records, or a completed task.
FAQ
Questions about CNA applications
What should I bring to a CNA interview?
Bring your resume, availability, any certifications or licenses, and a few examples that prove the skills in the job post.
How should I answer if I do not know something?
Be honest, explain how you would find the answer or ask for help, and show that you learn procedures quickly.
Should I memorize answers?
No. Prepare short talking points instead. You want to sound clear and specific, not scripted.
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