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I’m the exact same way, my opinion on my performance changes daily and it gets harder and harder to remember specifics. I keep worrying that I filled in a scantron bubble wrong or didn’t erase completely which will screw with my results. We will know for sure in 4 weeks!CFALOBO wrote:
The wait’s killing me, too. Some days I feel good about it, other days I feel horrible. This is no way to enjoy the holidays.
Best wishes for 2014!
yeah im a little nervous about it as well. but if you really think about it. your pass/fail results are already in with CFAI. they’re already done grading, just waiting for the release date now is all.CFALOBO wrote:
Yep, two more weeks. Waiting for bad news is not fun…
Especially the easy ones you’re supposed to nail without even thinking.Sorena27 wrote:
I know what you guys mean… I feel like as time passes I keep thinking of more questions that I may have messed up on and it makes the wait that much worse. Ahhh 2 more weeks to go
S2000,S2000magician wrote:
I took the exams in ‘97, ‘98, and ‘99. I do not recall being so anxious about the results. At that time, we received the results in the mail, and I can remember many people getting the envelope from AIMR (the old name for CFA Institute: Association for Investment Management and Research) and letting it sit unopened for days. I opened mine immediately: what’s going to change?
Relax. Either you passed, or else you didn’t. You cannot change it. Focus on the things you can influence today and tomorrow.
(Mind you: I speak as someone who passed each exam the first time, so I never experienced the profound disappointment of failing an exam. So: what do I know?)
those are some wise words there =)S2000magician wrote:
I took the exams in ‘97, ‘98, and ‘99. I do not recall being so anxious about the results. At that time, we received the results in the mail, and I can remember many people getting the envelope from AIMR (the old name for CFA Institute: Association for Investment Management and Research) and letting it sit unopened for days. I opened mine immediately: what’s going to change?
Relax. Either you passed, or else you didn’t. You cannot change it. Focus on the things you can influence today and tomorrow.
(Mind you: I speak as someone who passed each exam the first time, so I never experienced the profound disappointment of failing an exam. So: what do I know?)
Probably because you were killing your mocks. It’s quite obviuous you were born to be a CFA charterholder : )S2000magician wrote:
I took the exams in ‘97, ‘98, and ‘99. I do not recall being so anxious about the results. At that time, we received the results in the mail, and I can remember many people getting the envelope from AIMR (the old name for CFA Institute: Association for Investment Management and Research) and letting it sit unopened for days. I opened mine immediately: what’s going to change?
Relax. Either you passed, or else you didn’t. You cannot change it. Focus on the things you can influence today and tomorrow.
(Mind you: I speak as someone who passed each exam the first time, so I never experienced the profound disappointment of failing an exam. So: what do I know?)
The Level I exam isn’t much different, although we had four (or five?) answer choices. The format’s the same as it was then: 120 questions in the AM, 120 in the PM.mk17 wrote:
S2000,S2000magician wrote:I took the exams in ‘97, ‘98, and ‘99. I do not recall being so anxious about the results. At that time, we received the results in the mail, and I can remember many people getting the envelope from AIMR (the old name for CFA Institute: Association for Investment Management and Research) and letting it sit unopened for days. I opened mine immediately: what’s going to change?
Relax. Either you passed, or else you didn’t. You cannot change it. Focus on the things you can influence today and tomorrow.
(Mind you: I speak as someone who passed each exam the first time, so I never experienced the profound disappointment of failing an exam. So: what do I know?)
Wow, you have been around this game for that long? In your opinion, how have the exams evolved in the past 17 years?
I never took a mock exam (I don’t even recall if any were offered then), and worked maybe one practice exam per level. I studied all on my own, then took a 2-day or 3-day review in mid-May. My Level I review was taught by Carl Schweser himself, and my Level II and Level III reviews were taught by Andy Tempe (Carl’s successor at Schweser).CFALOBO wrote:
Probably because you were killing your mocks. It’s quite obviuous you were born to be a CFA charterholder : )S2000magician wrote:I took the exams in ‘97, ‘98, and ‘99. I do not recall being so anxious about the results. At that time, we received the results in the mail, and I can remember many people getting the envelope from AIMR (the old name for CFA Institute: Association for Investment Management and Research) and letting it sit unopened for days. I opened mine immediately: what’s going to change?
Relax. Either you passed, or else you didn’t. You cannot change it. Focus on the things you can influence today and tomorrow.
(Mind you: I speak as someone who passed each exam the first time, so I never experienced the profound disappointment of failing an exam. So: what do I know?)
Thanks for sharing your experience.S2000magician wrote:
I never took a mock exam (I don’t even recall if any were offered then), and worked maybe one practice exam per level. I studied all on my own, then took a 2-day or 3-day review in mid-May. My Level I review was taught by Carl Schweser himself, and my Level II and Level III reviews were taught by Andy Tempe (Carl’s successor at Schweser).CFALOBO wrote:
Probably because you were killing your mocks. It’s quite obviuous you were born to be a CFA charterholder : )S2000magician wrote:I took the exams in ‘97, ‘98, and ‘99. I do not recall being so anxious about the results. At that time, we received the results in the mail, and I can remember many people getting the envelope from AIMR (the old name for CFA Institute: Association for Investment Management and Research) and letting it sit unopened for days. I opened mine immediately: what’s going to change?
Relax. Either you passed, or else you didn’t. You cannot change it. Focus on the things you can influence today and tomorrow.
(Mind you: I speak as someone who passed each exam the first time, so I never experienced the profound disappointment of failing an exam. So: what do I know?)