Is this worth disputing?

You did well in Ethics, which I believe is an area you either good at or not - so that's a good thing. Just increase your FSA a little and boost that quant. There's quite a lot of detail in quant which I felt that I did not need in these past two exams to get a good score there. So if you scored below 50 this time in that area, its defintely something you can easily improve upon. The rest will flow naturally as you build upon the foundations.

Plus next time there won't be as much nerves and you'll know what to expect.
 
This actually makes me feel weird. This just doesn't add up. Makes me weary on taking it again this december.
 
I have been on AF for quite a while and have never read about anybody getting the exam result overturned
in the past it only worked on the tabulations of the essay exams ie the correct summing up of the total score, not applicable to L1 and L2
dont waste your money
 
The worst part for some of you is knowing that 10, maybe even 5 years ago you pass! That's really sad. Just an idea...the worst part when I failed was co-workers, ect. know...you feel like a loser, you shouldn't but you do. So the next exam, I didn't tell them I was taking it! It was easier that you might think, and no more, "So how's studying going?", ect. ect. and, of course, if I would have failed again nobody would have known! That took some pressure off and I passed. It was one of the better things I did in the CFA battle...don't tell them, or anyone else you don't want to know if you fail again...think about it...
 
Say what? Why would you think that the MPS was lower 5 or 10 years ago? The only justification for that would be if you thought the candidate pool now was the same as it was 5 or 10 years ago and it's clearly not.
 
ftown Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> The worst part for some of you is knowing that 10,
> maybe even 5 years ago you pass! That's really
> sad. Just an idea...the worst part when I failed
> was co-workers, ect. know...you feel like a loser,
> you shouldn't but you do. So the next exam, I
> didn't tell them I was taking it! It was easier
> that you might think, and no more, "So how's
> studying going?", ect. ect. and, of course, if I
> would have failed again nobody would have known!
> That took some pressure off and I passed. It was
> one of the better things I did in the CFA
> battle...don't tell them, or anyone else you don't
> want to know if you fail again...think about it...


D�j� vu. how many threads did you copy and paste this into?
 
Tell everybody you're doing the CFA and pass it. If you don't intend to pass, why bother?
 
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