@DaniP
Your study strategy was remarkably similar to mine. I would say 60-70% of my study efforts involved making the most detailed notes I could from the video series, having the concepts explained to me definately helped with regards to my understanding of the material. My way of doing it was the following, and in this order
1) Watch and write notes from every single video, my notes consisted of the bullet points on the slides that went with the notes along with any extra instruction the instructors may have noted (important concepts, likely to be on the exam, etc). I should note that if I didn’t understand a concept, I would replay the video, sometimes once, sometimes over 5 different times until I fully understood what was being taught. I think they had about 70 hours of runtime, but i definately spent upwards of 200 hours on them.
2) About 75% of the Qbank questions to drill down silly concepts. QBank is definately NOT sufficient as a study resource, but it definately helps solidify some concepts that may have not been clear during the videos. After watching a video study session, i would do the Qbank after to make sure what I learned stuck. Doing 500 questions on a subject is useful in remembing.
3) Never read the Schweser notes, but I did every single EOC question I could get my hand on.
4) Made flash cards of all the important concepts, and stuck them up on the wall behind where my study desk was. If you’ve ever seen prison break, my study wall looked a lot like that. Staring at them every day was remarkably useful in remembering.
5) All 6 mock exams along with the 2 (i think it was 2) that CFA provided.
That’s what worked for me. I think if there’s any lesson to be taken from this, it’s that everyone learns differently. I found between the mock exams, qbank and EOC, your likelyhood of being able to reverse engineer concepts goes up dramatically.
I don’t see from your posts if you did any mock exams? I found those to be very useful in time management.