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In my opinion this is the key to passing Level IIItozerrt wrote:
The “rule of thumb” is damage control in the AM, and killing it in the PM
I’m more inclined to agree with this. Damage control in the AM and crushing the PM is more of a conclusion for what ends up happening rather then a strategy to study by. anyone will naturally do better in the PM because you have a 1/3 chance of guessing correctly.PhillyKid126 wrote:
I dunno man, my goal is just to try and kill it in the AM and PM the best I can. I’m taking the approach of try not to “game it” by scoring 50% in the AM and 80% in the PM. It’s very difficult ot know what they’re going to ask and everyone’s interpretation of difficulty is different. I’d focus more on mastering the largest topics of the exam rather than AM vs. PM, which you really have no control over. Good luck.
You are correct in saying that “damage control in the AM and killing it in the PM” is the most common scoring aftermath for those who are fortunate to pass – and not a strategy to study by. But when AFers post their own exam scoring matrix in August, that is just the way it seems to pan out for the majority. Most people don’t score as well in the morning session as they had hoped or expected to, and will need to their afternoon score to help push them across line the finish line – that’s my point.itera wrote:
Damage control in the AM and crushing the PM is more of a conclusion for what ends up happening rather then a strategy to study by. anyone will naturally do better in the PM because you have a 1/3 chance of guessing correctly.
study hard and plan to score well in both regardless,