How I Passed Level 1

Yancey Wade

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How I Passed Level 1

I do not have a finance background, and I found every subject to be extremely difficult.

I'm not going to say "know this section" "know that section" because you have to know every section. Don't try and predict what will and what won't be on the exam. This is a concept exam. As you go through the questions from each section, CLEARLY UNDERSTAND EXACTLY WHAT THE LEARNING OUTCOME STATEMENT SAYS TO KNOW. Don't rely on Schweser; half of their questions are five years old. Schweser's questions are helpful, but know why you are answering each question - meaning keep a LOS outline close to the computer. At the end of the day, it's a LOS concept test.

FSA is the biggest section on the exam, and I found Schweser NOT HELPFUL on this subject. Yes, Schweswer offers hundreds of questions on FSA, but CFAI books are teaching you what the LOS is asking, and that's what you need to know. Schweser keeps asking diluted EPS formula questions and detailed lease questions - questions that honestly take 3-4 minutes with a calculator at a minimum, while the exam itself will ask the CONCEPT about diluted EPS or off balance sheet leasing, with little or no computing.

Study Materials: I utilized everything I could get my hands on. I mostly relied on Schweser's Question Bank, going through about 4,000 questions. I answered about half of the questions at the end of each chapter in the CFAI books. The CFAI text questions are difficult, but very helpful. I watched Stalla's free lectures on their website.

Sample tests: I practically memorized Schweser Book 6 practice exams. I took nearly every CFA sample test and Mock exam. It's CRITICAL you get used to finishing 120 questions in three hours. It may sound easy, but come game day, keeping your concentration going strong for 6 hours is difficult. The Boston Security Analysts Society (BSAS) test was very helpful, too. I also got in the habit of taking tests on Saturdays from (9 - 12) and (2 - 5), simulating game day, to get used to the schedule.

Test Taking Skills: SPEED: each session in Level one is basically a three hour sprint. It's like a super-fast foreign language exam. Either you know the irregular verbs or you don't, but you definitely do not have time to sit around and think about each question. Each section (Ethics, Quant, Econ, FSA, etc.) has a question or two that is impossible. Those questions are there on purpose! They are there to for you to break your rhythm, to slow you down, to stress you out. When you get to those questions, move on right away; don't waste more than 15 seconds on that question. The guy next to you may get stubborn and spend 5 minutes on that question, then will fall behind in time for the rest of the exam.

What really helped me was going through each section and FINDING THE QUESTIONS I KNOW, AND NOT GETTING STUCK ON THE QUESTIONS I DO NOT KNOW. During the actual exam I circled on my answer sheet all the questions I totally didn't know. It came to about 15 questions per session. Then after I finished the entire exam I went through those questions, without being stressed out about finishing the exam, eliminated the obvious incorrect answers, and took an honest guess. The most important thing is that I moved past the really hard questions and found the easier questions. At the end of the day, each question is worth the same, so don't get hung up on a question that takes a lot of time and is super-ridiculously hard.

Diet: I love coffee, but a month before the exam I had to completely stop drinking it because I noticed that my concentration levels were strong for an hour, and inconsistent for the next three hours. Also, I got in the habit of eating very little sugar. When the test day came around, I found that I could concentrate very calmly for 6-7 straight hours. I made peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for the test day.

Some of what I said may be helpful, some of it may be silly. Good luck. I hope in someway this was useful.



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at Wednesday, August 6, 2008 at 10:15AM by Yancey Wade.
 
Thank you very much to share your interesting study and test strategies. I'm sure everyone could benefit something from it.

Concentration is a big requirement - my focus span is short and I felt very difficult to re-focus whenever I was distracted away. Coffee always helps me but I'm disciplined to drink only one cup in the morning. Sugar is no good - white enemy.

By the way, are you allowed to bring a few pieces of scribble paper for calculation?
 
You can't bring scribble paper. There is space in the question booklet for that.

It's so funny how everybody's strategy is different. I never concentrated on the LOS and in fact did not even read them when studying. I pretty just much learned the core concepts from CFAI and Schweser. I probably could not have recited a single LOS on exam date.
 
might be silly to ask but what exactly is LOS, is it in the CFAI Text?
 
learning outcome statement,
did you start studying yet?
 
I was the same way.

Yancey, I agree with the things you said for the most part but Schweser was more than enough for FSA. You could read 2-3 pages in Schweser about Diluted EPS or 15-20 in the CFAI books.

Schweser is heavy on the problems and I think that is great. If you know the formula and how to calculate an answer you inherently know the concept, but if you know the concept you don't necessarily know the formula.
 
Yeah I'm with Billy Collins. I never studied thinking I have to be able to answer the LOS. It's a MC exam so you aren't expected to be able to answer the LOS extremely thoroughly.
 
Nice tips... I was wondering what other concentration boosters people were using..

Check out my CFA blog:

http://mycfaadventure.blogspot.com
 
good post, i echo what you said about FSA and CFAI books nailing it
 
Dear Yancey Wade,
I am sitting my exam in Dec '08 of CFA Level 1. I also have no prior finance background. I have started studying Schweser Notes as i have not received books from CFAI yet. However, I am ready to give 8-10 hours of study daily.
My question is ...Should i first read CFAI books and then consult Schwser or vice versa? Secondly recommend me some other book which will make my basic concepts clear in finance. Imagine i dont even know what cashflow means :(
 
Kallis - you have no time for any other reference books at this time. Just refer to CFAI / Schweser books. No order matters if you can take it up fast.
When you are near the exam, do not expect that you start reading CFAI books, you can go crazy reading them then. If you really want to read them - Do it now. They are surely good to read but not necessary enough that you cannot pass without them.
Schweser has done a god job to compress the material to the most important points, might not cover every question though but I still say they are Good.
 
dont do FSA from the CFA curriculum if you are starting now. no doubt its good but it's way too lengthy. learn it from Schweser and then refer the curriculum whenever necessary.
do enough questions from schweser or any other source.

-- A stitch in time saves nine --
 
I found it much harder to concentrate in the afternoon session. A friend of mine went jogging during the lunch break and he swears that's the way to go. I'll probably do it for 2 and 3.
 
Nice write-up, Yancey Wade. I most especially agree with you on the part where you said it's always best not to take too much time on any one number to optimize the limited time you have. In fact, I first answered those topic areas which I was pretty much sure I would excel in to give me that extra boost of confidence early on during the morning and afternoon sessions.
 
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