Nevada School Bus (S) practice test
20 questions · 80% to pass · Required to drive a school bus.
How to use this practice test
Read each question, click an answer, and the correct choice is highlighted with a short explanation referencing the underlying CDL Manual concept. Your live score appears at the top of the page. Refresh to reset.
This test runs entirely in your browser. Nothing is uploaded; no account is required. Pages refresh to a new randomized cut from the bank.
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1. When approaching a bus stop, you should:
Explanation. Activate amber warning lights well before the stop (typically 200 feet, varies by state).
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2. Per federal regulations, school buses must stop at all railroad crossings:
Explanation. School buses must stop at all railroad crossings within 15-50 feet of the nearest rail. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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3. Before students are allowed to cross the road in front of the bus, the driver should:
Explanation. Verify all traffic has stopped, then signal students across, and watch them complete the crossing.
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4. Most state DMV CDL handbooks state that mirror checks include:
Explanation. Cross-view (crossover) mirrors let the driver see the area immediately in front of the bus where children may be hidden. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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5. According to the FMCSA CDL Manual, before students are allowed to cross the road in front of the bus, the driver should:
Explanation. Verify all traffic has stopped, then signal students across, and watch them complete the crossing. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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6. Per federal regulations, when evacuating a school bus, the front exit is preferred:
Explanation. Use the safest exit; the front exit is preferred when not blocked by fire or damage. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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7. During a pre-trip inspection, strobe lights, where equipped, should be used:
Explanation. Use roof-mounted strobes during low visibility (rain, fog, dusk) where allowed. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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8. Experienced commercial drivers know that mirror checks include:
Explanation. Cross-view (crossover) mirrors let the driver see the area immediately in front of the bus where children may be hidden. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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9. Most state DMV CDL handbooks state that when evacuating a school bus, the front exit is preferred:
Explanation. Use the safest exit; the front exit is preferred when not blocked by fire or damage. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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10. According to the FMCSA CDL Manual, when approaching a bus stop, you should:
Explanation. Activate amber warning lights well before the stop (typically 200 feet, varies by state). (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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11. When taking the CDL knowledge exam, before students are allowed to cross the road in front of the bus, the driver should:
Explanation. Verify all traffic has stopped, then signal students across, and watch them complete the crossing. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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12. Experienced commercial drivers know that strobe lights, where equipped, should be used:
Explanation. Use roof-mounted strobes during low visibility (rain, fog, dusk) where allowed. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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13. In real-world commercial driving, a post-trip child check requires the driver to:
Explanation. Walk to the rear of the bus checking every seat after each route to ensure no child is left behind. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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14. Strobe lights, where equipped, should be used:
Explanation. Use roof-mounted strobes during low visibility (rain, fog, dusk) where allowed.
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15. Mirror checks include:
Explanation. Cross-view (crossover) mirrors let the driver see the area immediately in front of the bus where children may be hidden.
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16. When operating a CMV in interstate commerce, the "danger zone" around a school bus extends:
Explanation. The danger zone is the area immediately around the bus where children are at greatest risk. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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17. When evacuating a school bus, the front exit is preferred:
Explanation. Use the safest exit; the front exit is preferred when not blocked by fire or damage.
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18. When operating a CMV in interstate commerce, when approaching a bus stop, you should:
Explanation. Activate amber warning lights well before the stop (typically 200 feet, varies by state). (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
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19. A post-trip child check requires the driver to:
Explanation. Walk to the rear of the bus checking every seat after each route to ensure no child is left behind.
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20. During a pre-trip inspection, the "danger zone" around a school bus extends:
Explanation. The danger zone is the area immediately around the bus where children are at greatest risk. (Reinforcement variant — same underlying CDL Manual concept.)
About the School Bus (S) exam
The School Bus endorsement requires Passenger (P) endorsement plus state-specific school-bus knowledge. Topics include the danger zone, mirrors, loading and unloading, post-trip child checks, railroad crossings, emergency exits, and state-mandated student management procedures.
This Nevada-specific edition uses the same federal source material every U.S. state adopts. The Nevada DMV administers the actual exam at its service centers. Bring your CDL handbook for any last-minute reference; it’s free at every Nevada DMV office.
Once you’re consistently scoring above 90% on this practice set, you’re well above the 80% required to pass the official Nevada exam. Drill the questions you miss most often, then take the test cold once a day for a week leading up to your appointment.
Tips that actually work
- Read every answer choice before clicking. CDL questions are famous for "best answer" wording where two choices look right.
- Don’t memorize question text — learn the underlying rule. The DMV reshuffles wording constantly.
- Keep a list of the questions you miss. Re-drill them in isolation until you can’t miss them.
- Practice in short, frequent sessions. Two 20-minute sessions per day beats one two-hour cram.
What happens after I pass?
Passing the knowledge test earns you a Commercial Learner’s Permit (CLP). You must hold the CLP for at least 14 days before you can take the road skills test, and you must drive with a CDL-holding instructor in the cab during that period. Once you pass the road skills test, your CDL is issued.