Monty.

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Monty.

Prep that makes sense.

Targeted practice, linked to the actual law. Statutes translated into plain English. An AI mentor ready the moment an answer does not click.

Currently available for Georgia · More states coming soon

Every answer comes with the law behind it.

× Not This

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Mystery rationales you have to trust on faith
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17-minute videos to understand one answer
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Bloated dashboards and maze-like navigation
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"Just memorize this" with no context
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Stale rules from who-knows-when

✓ This

Every answer traced to the actual statute
Plain-English translations right next to the law
Clean, focused, open-and-go interface
Teachable moments that show you the exam's logic
Ask Monty when an explanation doesn't click

Three tiers. One mastery path.

Monty doesn't quiz you randomly. It walks you through a progression: learn the rule, apply it, then handle the traps the MPJE actually tests.

1

Learn the Rule

Direct recall questions test whether you know a specific law. You learn the rule by being tested on it — failed attempts create the hook that makes the explanation stick.

2

Apply It

Realistic pharmacy scenarios test whether you can recognize which rule is triggered and apply it correctly. Retail, hospital, LTC — the settings you'll face on exam day.

3

Master the Trap

MPJE-style questions with plausible distractors and "most correct" reasoning. Handle the ambiguity, exceptions, and judgment calls that separate passing from failing.

No mystery answers. No stale rules.

Every question is grounded in the actual statute. You see the original legal text, a plain-English translation, the federal vs. state distinction, and exactly why the correct answer is right — and why each wrong answer is wrong.

✓ Correct Answer
The pharmacist may dispense a 72-hour emergency supply

In Georgia, a pharmacist may provide an emergency supply of up to 72 hours for non-controlled maintenance medications when the prescriber is unavailable and interruption would endanger the patient.

O.C.G.A. § 26-4-80(b)(3) "A pharmacist may dispense a sufficient quantity of a dangerous drug to maintain the patient… not to exceed a 72-hour supply."

You are never stuck with a bad explanation.

When an answer doesn't make sense, ask Monty. It's like ChatGPT — but constrained to the exact law and question context. No hallucinations, no generic answers. Just clear, grounded help at the moment of confusion.

Ask Monty
Why isn't it 48 hours instead of 72?
Georgia statute O.C.G.A. § 26-4-80 specifically sets the emergency supply limit at 72 hours. The 48-hour limit you may be thinking of applies to Schedule II emergency dispensing under federal DEA rules — a common MPJE trap.

Built for the week before the MPJE.

No giant video library. No maze of tabs. No bloated dashboard. Open the app, pick your mode, answer questions, get clear remediation, drill your weak spots. Clean enough for panic mode. Deep enough for mastery.

Tier 2 · Scenario Application
A patient presents a partially filled C-II prescription at a community pharmacy. The original fill was 5 days ago. The pharmacist has the remaining quantity in stock. What should the pharmacist do?
B
Dispense the remainder — partial fills of C-II are allowed within 72 hours
A
Refuse — partial fills of C-II are not permitted
C
Contact the prescriber for a new prescription
D
Dispense — there is no time limit on partial fills

This is the whole product.

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