Why pass rates still low?

ok, common guys, break it up, nothing to see around here, back in your corners.
btw - love your work Pierre.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Woodman
The best porn flic I ever saw was with my wife in a hotel in Caen. It was french soft porn but had my wife and I marathon shagging like rabbits. I’d pay top dollar to find more like it.
 
iteracom wrote:
pierrewoodman_fan wrote:
iteracom wrote:Hahaha frenchie goes through L1 and thinks hes something. Cant wait till he gets torn a new one from L2
we are all on the same boat mon ami, no need to act all mighty. you just finished climbing the same ladder I am climbing now and since you passed L2, by your own words it means you already have a second anus by now.
Yet again, you show no deductive reasoning and have no cognitive abilities. As is obvious, I didn’t question why people fail, therefore didn’t get violated as you will.
So you just randomly show up on other peoples cfa threads, ignore the question they ask and post ur shiz, act like a big guy cause you got the charter and come to make us feel guilty that we are writing the exams. then you get owned by the op who is me and still cant suck it up.
At the bank where I work at they have traders go thru black out periods if they make errors after errors, I recommend you do the same. Each subsequent post of your is making you look more retarded.
Are you sure you arn’t the pony tail guy from Good Will Hunting? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmRe_fK7pbw
 
pierrewoodman_fan wrote:
iteracom wrote:
pierrewoodman_fan wrote:
iteracom wrote:Hahaha frenchie goes through L1 and thinks hes something. Cant wait till he gets torn a new one from L2
we are all on the same boat mon ami, no need to act all mighty. you just finished climbing the same ladder I am climbing now and since you passed L2, by your own words it means you already have a second anus by now.
Yet again, you show no deductive reasoning and have no cognitive abilities. As is obvious, I didn’t question why people fail, therefore didn’t get violated as you will.
So you just randomly show up on other peoples cfa threads, ignore the question they ask and post ur shiz, act like a big guy cause you got the charter and come to make us feel guilty that we are writing the exams. then you get owned by the op who is me and still cant suck it up.
At the bank where I work at they have traders go thru black out periods if they make errors after errors, I recommend you do the same. Each subsequent post of your is making you look more retarded.
Are you sure you arn’t the pony tail guy from Good Will Hunting? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmRe_fK7pbw
was a great movie though
 
from a person who easily passed level I has since failed level II twice Iteracom’s graphic is spot on, despite offering little detail. also from being on the LII thread for a few yrs he knows his stuff and your questions is rather vague.
i’d suggest going thru the materials for a few months then revisiting this topic with more specific questions on financial reporting, equity valuation methods, fixed inc, etc. the level of detail and sheer amount of information can be mind numbing. IMO what makes level II much more difficult is how the question are presented, simple one-off multiple guess for level I and item set format for level II. level II is only 120 questions, but the reading comprehension, esp in ethics is crucial. you can’t get too bogged down with the reading, which you can easily spend 10 mins on re-reading, then another 15 on the questions. before you know it 2 hrs is gone and you have four item sets left, start rushing and make dumb mistakes. CFA inst are professionals at creating tests designed to offer one answer that is close, one in left field and one correct. one is easy to eliminate then you split hairs over the remaining two for five mins. the test can really lull you into a false sense of confidence. i walked out the test last June thinking I put in a good performance, decent shot to pass, ended up band 5. if you can nail FRA, eqy, corp finance and ethics you’ll pass, but odds are you’ll do poorly on one or two of those so you need to make up for in other areas. fixed inc. specifically valuing swaps and FRA’s can be a real PITA. there was a Swap set on last yr exam that I must have spent 20 mins on, maybe went 2/6 from guessing, prob 1/6. nothing in particular, concept wise, is overly difficult but when you combine the topics together the range of questions can be so varied that I think a degree of luck is a factor. good chance there will one or two item sets that are not in your strong areas and it’s easy to get run over, like I did on the swaps set last yr. focus on the core areas and be sure to leave at least six weeks for practice tests. good luck
 
don’t want to be a ethics nazi but you just violated the candidate pledge you took last year…
 
you can mention topics on previous exams without violating the pledge if you don’t go into specifcs in attempts to recreate the question. if that was the case 2/3 of people belonging to this forum would be in violation. and you are are being an ethics nazi
 
jgrandits wrote:
from a person who easily passed level I has since failed level II twice Iteracom’s graphic is spot on, despite offering little detail. also from being on the LII thread for a few yrs he knows his stuff and your questions is rather vague.
i’d suggest going thru the materials for a few months then revisiting this topic with more specific questions on financial reporting, equity valuation methods, fixed inc, etc. the level of detail and sheer amount of information can be mind numbing. IMO what makes level II much more difficult is how the question are presented, simple one-off multiple guess for level I and item set format for level II. level II is only 120 questions, but the reading comprehension, esp in ethics is crucial. you can’t get too bogged down with the reading, which you can easily spend 10 mins on re-reading, then another 15 on the questions. before you know it 2 hrs is gone and you have four item sets left, start rushing and make dumb mistakes. CFA inst are professionals at creating tests designed to offer one answer that is close, one in left field and one correct. one is easy to eliminate then you split hairs over the remaining two for five mins. the test can really lull you into a false sense of confidence. i walked out the test last June thinking I put in a good performance, decent shot to pass, ended up band 5. if you can nail FRA, eqy, corp finance and ethics you’ll pass, but odds are you’ll do poorly on one or two of those so you need to make up for in other areas. fixed inc. specifically valuing swaps and FRA’s can be a real PITA. there was a Swap set on last yr exam that I must have spent 20 mins on, maybe went 2/6 from guessing, prob 1/6. nothing in particular, concept wise, is overly difficult but when you combine the topics together the range of questions can be so varied that I think a degree of luck is a factor. good chance there will one or two item sets that are not in your strong areas and it’s easy to get run over, like I did on the swaps set last yr. focus on the core areas and be sure to leave at least six weeks for practice tests. good luck
You are right you are not sure of passing even aftet putting a lot og hrs in L2. Coz u wil mever know the answers were marked in actual exam were right or wrong. Only mock exams in the month of May can give u some idea where are u standing
Maybe luck favours us on JUNE 1
 
jgrandits wrote:
from a person who easily passed level I has since failed level II twice Iteracom’s graphic is spot on, despite offering little detail. also from being on the LII thread for a few yrs he knows his stuff and your questions is rather vague.
i’d suggest going thru the materials for a few months then revisiting this topic with more specific questions on financial reporting, equity valuation methods, fixed inc, etc. the level of detail and sheer amount of information can be mind numbing. IMO what makes level II much more difficult is how the question are presented, simple one-off multiple guess for level I and item set format for level II. level II is only 120 questions, but the reading comprehension, esp in ethics is crucial. you can’t get too bogged down with the reading, which you can easily spend 10 mins on re-reading, then another 15 on the questions. before you know it 2 hrs is gone and you have four item sets left, start rushing and make dumb mistakes. CFA inst are professionals at creating tests designed to offer one answer that is close, one in left field and one correct. one is easy to eliminate then you split hairs over the remaining two for five mins. the test can really lull you into a false sense of confidence. i walked out the test last June thinking I put in a good performance, decent shot to pass, ended up band 5. if you can nail FRA, eqy, corp finance and ethics you’ll pass, but odds are you’ll do poorly on one or two of those so you need to make up for in other areas. fixed inc. specifically valuing swaps and FRA’s can be a real PITA. there was a Swap set on last yr exam that I must have spent 20 mins on, maybe went 2/6 from guessing, prob 1/6. nothing in particular, concept wise, is overly difficult but when you combine the topics together the range of questions can be so varied that I think a degree of luck is a factor. good chance there will one or two item sets that are not in your strong areas and it’s easy to get run over, like I did on the swaps set last yr. focus on the core areas and be sure to leave at least six weeks for practice tests. good luck
jgrandits you are incorrect. Obviously all 10 topics are going to be tested however you are not allowed to state what part of the topic was examined and what was not. You are giving away the contents of the exam.
 
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