aarishpatell
New member
- May 4, 2013
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- 0
Thoughts on How to Approach These Kinds of Exams:
Know Your Level
-Depending on where you are, you may need more or fewer hours. Someone like myself, with a background in finance, an MBA and 5 years of work experience in finance probably doesn’t need as much time spent as someone who is just learning what an enterprise value is. There is no shame in wherever you are, but you just want to be realistic and make sure that you’re putting in enough time. You want to make sure you don’t want to repeat the test just because you didn’t prepare optimally, or because you were embarrassed to admit you needed more hours than your peers. The satisfaction will come in passing, so study and make it happen.
Understand What is Actually Difficult
-To most people, this isn’t a difficult exam in terms of the large majority of the material. If you think that, maybe this isn’t for you. Not to be condescending, but this is a very basic test and these topics get much more complicated. The CFA differentiates passers / failers not by who knows the topics the best, but by who can memorize a lot of terms, understand very basic concepts and fill equations the best. I believe they make it purposely tedious to differentiate. So, be ready for this and approach it with a good attitude.
Think to yourself, I can pass this exam if I put in the work that is required, based on the level that I am at. If I don’t, I certainly won’t pass. When you start getting tired / frustrated, take a step away. Remember, frustration and lack of commitment are the only things that should keep you from passing. Make sure you memorize terms, know the equations and understand how one factor within a concept flows with / influences another. These are the key ways they will test your knowledge.
Also remember, no one comes in memorizing everything. If there is some very obscure question, it will likely be difficult for most everyone. Knowing obscure portions is important, but not to the extent that it gets in the way of knowing the most tested and basic concepts very well.
Spend Less Time Talking about What to Do and Do It
-Enough said. Get down to work and don’t talk about what you’re going to do. I know I’m here doing this, so you can call me a hypocrite, but I’m writing this because I’m very interested in this process of maximizing my abilities and I’m hoping to get feedback from the group. If you’re interested in stuff like this, you might want to try books like ‘Art of Learning’ by Waitzin. Blows my mind personally.
Start High Level and Gradually Get Deeper in Detail
-If you tested people who took the exam 2-3 years ago without giving them the opportunity to study again, I’d expect them to do very poorly. I’ve largely noticed from intelligent peers that the retention rate of this material is very poor. Just look at how we take ethics three times and most people (including myself) have to prepare each time for it. So, remember, don’t memorize stuff too early. I think the right way is to start with general concepts and then get more and more into details as the test nears. Memorize terms, equations when the test comes up nearer, but work to understand big picture concepts very early in the process. My wife is just painting a beautiful landscape, and she also has a similar process. She fills in the outline, then the colors and then the details. Our preparation is analogous, in my opinion.
Do Lots of Questions
-You can sit there and read the hundreds of pages of material for many hours, and then you’ll probably notice that it is still very difficult to bring yourself to know a lot of the answers to the questions. Answering the questions is when you really test yourself. Start relatively early.
Learn from the Questions and Take Notes
-This is a key way to learn. You’ll learn the big picture material earlier in the process, and as you take questions, they will force you to learn more detail. Keep a log of all the questions you get wrong, and look up the answers in the text. Read more than just the relevant material to your question, and take it as an opportunity to brush up on that topic. Do this a lot and don’t worry about your scores until you get closer. The idea is to build your idea base, not to pass the practice test. Don’t give yourself credit for getting an answer right unless you got it right due to knowing the information (vs. a random or educated guess). Those count as incorrect answers when you practice.
Make Your Weaknesses Your Strengths
-Especially as the test gets really near, take pride in opening the book and learning details you didn’t know before. Spend a few hours reading up on whatever topics are weakest and make them your strengths. However, make sure always to pay most attention to the most tested areas.
Simulate the Actual Test Day
Make sure you don’t get caught off guard on test day. Be ready for the time of day the test occurs, practice getting to the exam room, think of whatever could potentially go wrong and have solutions (calculator, pencils, train schedules, parking, etc. etc.). This will help you relax and be in auto pilot about everything but the actual exam.
Actual Day
Get a good night’s rest and don’t cram on the last day. It’s of course okay to study, but make sure you get a good nights rest. Relax and remember that whatever happens, you’re still going to be fine and that you did the best you can. Concentrate on reading the questions closely, especially things like ‘which is least likely’ vs. ‘which is most likely’. Don’t spend too much time on a question. If you don’t know, leave it for later and come back to it if you have time. Also, don’t leave any blanks (make sure you have time left to at least randomly fill in ones you don’t know).
With just under a month left, there is still plenty of time to fix whatever you’re dong wrong, if anything. I’d give the same advice to anyone who is taking an exam like the Series 7, 63, etc. etc. because the type of testing (memorize / forget type) is similar. I’ve passed all kinds of these exams, though my accomplishments don’t have anything to do with this advice, really.
Thanks for reading and best of luck to everyone. Please leave some feedback. I’d particularly appreciate anyone who can pick at my ideas or help me improve them.
Know Your Level
-Depending on where you are, you may need more or fewer hours. Someone like myself, with a background in finance, an MBA and 5 years of work experience in finance probably doesn’t need as much time spent as someone who is just learning what an enterprise value is. There is no shame in wherever you are, but you just want to be realistic and make sure that you’re putting in enough time. You want to make sure you don’t want to repeat the test just because you didn’t prepare optimally, or because you were embarrassed to admit you needed more hours than your peers. The satisfaction will come in passing, so study and make it happen.
Understand What is Actually Difficult
-To most people, this isn’t a difficult exam in terms of the large majority of the material. If you think that, maybe this isn’t for you. Not to be condescending, but this is a very basic test and these topics get much more complicated. The CFA differentiates passers / failers not by who knows the topics the best, but by who can memorize a lot of terms, understand very basic concepts and fill equations the best. I believe they make it purposely tedious to differentiate. So, be ready for this and approach it with a good attitude.
Think to yourself, I can pass this exam if I put in the work that is required, based on the level that I am at. If I don’t, I certainly won’t pass. When you start getting tired / frustrated, take a step away. Remember, frustration and lack of commitment are the only things that should keep you from passing. Make sure you memorize terms, know the equations and understand how one factor within a concept flows with / influences another. These are the key ways they will test your knowledge.
Also remember, no one comes in memorizing everything. If there is some very obscure question, it will likely be difficult for most everyone. Knowing obscure portions is important, but not to the extent that it gets in the way of knowing the most tested and basic concepts very well.
Spend Less Time Talking about What to Do and Do It
-Enough said. Get down to work and don’t talk about what you’re going to do. I know I’m here doing this, so you can call me a hypocrite, but I’m writing this because I’m very interested in this process of maximizing my abilities and I’m hoping to get feedback from the group. If you’re interested in stuff like this, you might want to try books like ‘Art of Learning’ by Waitzin. Blows my mind personally.
Start High Level and Gradually Get Deeper in Detail
-If you tested people who took the exam 2-3 years ago without giving them the opportunity to study again, I’d expect them to do very poorly. I’ve largely noticed from intelligent peers that the retention rate of this material is very poor. Just look at how we take ethics three times and most people (including myself) have to prepare each time for it. So, remember, don’t memorize stuff too early. I think the right way is to start with general concepts and then get more and more into details as the test nears. Memorize terms, equations when the test comes up nearer, but work to understand big picture concepts very early in the process. My wife is just painting a beautiful landscape, and she also has a similar process. She fills in the outline, then the colors and then the details. Our preparation is analogous, in my opinion.
Do Lots of Questions
-You can sit there and read the hundreds of pages of material for many hours, and then you’ll probably notice that it is still very difficult to bring yourself to know a lot of the answers to the questions. Answering the questions is when you really test yourself. Start relatively early.
Learn from the Questions and Take Notes
-This is a key way to learn. You’ll learn the big picture material earlier in the process, and as you take questions, they will force you to learn more detail. Keep a log of all the questions you get wrong, and look up the answers in the text. Read more than just the relevant material to your question, and take it as an opportunity to brush up on that topic. Do this a lot and don’t worry about your scores until you get closer. The idea is to build your idea base, not to pass the practice test. Don’t give yourself credit for getting an answer right unless you got it right due to knowing the information (vs. a random or educated guess). Those count as incorrect answers when you practice.
Make Your Weaknesses Your Strengths
-Especially as the test gets really near, take pride in opening the book and learning details you didn’t know before. Spend a few hours reading up on whatever topics are weakest and make them your strengths. However, make sure always to pay most attention to the most tested areas.
Simulate the Actual Test Day
Make sure you don’t get caught off guard on test day. Be ready for the time of day the test occurs, practice getting to the exam room, think of whatever could potentially go wrong and have solutions (calculator, pencils, train schedules, parking, etc. etc.). This will help you relax and be in auto pilot about everything but the actual exam.
Actual Day
Get a good night’s rest and don’t cram on the last day. It’s of course okay to study, but make sure you get a good nights rest. Relax and remember that whatever happens, you’re still going to be fine and that you did the best you can. Concentrate on reading the questions closely, especially things like ‘which is least likely’ vs. ‘which is most likely’. Don’t spend too much time on a question. If you don’t know, leave it for later and come back to it if you have time. Also, don’t leave any blanks (make sure you have time left to at least randomly fill in ones you don’t know).
With just under a month left, there is still plenty of time to fix whatever you’re dong wrong, if anything. I’d give the same advice to anyone who is taking an exam like the Series 7, 63, etc. etc. because the type of testing (memorize / forget type) is similar. I’ve passed all kinds of these exams, though my accomplishments don’t have anything to do with this advice, really.
Thanks for reading and best of luck to everyone. Please leave some feedback. I’d particularly appreciate anyone who can pick at my ideas or help me improve them.