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Vignette first or question first?

To all who took level II in June 2012, what worked better for you in the exam?
1. Read the vignette first, then the questions; and come back to vignette as needed
2. Read the questions first, then read the vignette
3. Something else?
I followed method 1. Found method 2 too jerky. To me, reading questions first made no sense because I had no context. Even counting the time spent reading the vignette, I never felt under time pressure. I had mentally allocated 18 minutes per 6-question set, with 5 to read vignette and 2 per question on average, with 3 extra minutes as buffer. On the whole that worked OK (for me.) I finished both parts without using any buffer, in 15*10 = 150 minutes or 2.5 hours, leaving the rest of the time for rechecking my answers.

2.
Read first 3 lines of vignette
Read the Q,
find the relevant paragraph, mark it,
read slightly above and slightly below to see if there’s other info required.
The questions are asked in order IIRC so you are not going to miss too many salient points that will change your answers

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I started reading the entire vignette, but then once I realized I was 1/2 into the exam, but only like 1/3rd of the MC’s answered, I started spot reading and going to the questions first…

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I agree with 8EEZBaby.  After a while you can look at the first question and go back to the vignette and find where it relates.  It comes with practise tho but you’ll probs notice a similar thing when doing the EOCs.

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prozario wrote:
i would read the 1st question (i dont read the answer at this point), and then read vignette until you get all info for first question.  After completing 1st question, then go back read 2nd question, and continue reading on vignette … they usually put the info in order.    Differnt people has differnt style, i guess you experiement with it, and see what works best for you.

+1. I always read the keywords in the first question and go back & give the vignette a good read. And I repeat till the questions are complete. Underlining important points helps.
For example, something like “residing in UK” (in case of economics currency translation questions) or “IFRS” or “GAAP” etc helps. Because these are key to answer the question, you need this for each of the 5 questions.
And you know friend, you would device your own method by end of two months of your preparation. As somebody rightly said, everybody is different and it works differently for us. But make a conscious effort and you would be fine!

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i would read the 1st question (i dont read the answer at this point), and then read vignette until you get all info for first question.  After completing 1st question, then go back read 2nd question, and continue reading on vignette … they usually put the info in order.    Differnt people has differnt style, i guess you experiement with it, and see what works best for you.

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You read the first question then look at the first 2 paragraphs of the vignette for the answer. I usually skip the first introductory paragraph because it just introduces the people involved. Once you find the answer, then you go to the second question and look back at the vignette were you left off until you find the answer. Repeat the process for questions 3 & 4.
The questions are in order of how they appear in the vignette. Sometimes questions 5&6 may require you to look back but by then you have already read the neccessary facts from the previous questions 1-4 you researched in the process above.

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I would read the first paragraph of the Vignette to get the context of the question.  Next I would read the first question (luckily questions are asked in the order that the information is given on the vignette).  Then I would read the vignette until I had enough info to answer question one.  After that I would just repeat… moving on to reading question two and then back to the vignette, etc.  Worked well for me.

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I went with 1 also…
Only because as you read through the story, you kind of get a sense of what the questions will be and what’s important anyways… so focus on reading and underlining what you think are important first.
e.g. many questions are for example which statement is wrong out of the three stated… so when i came across bullet points, I tried to figure out first which ones are off etc…
and then go to the questions to see if i can answer most of them, and any that require me to go back, i would and get answers that way.
the readings are not short, but not THAT long.. especially compared to the quesions on mocks, i felt that the actual exam’s readings were half the length… so you won’t waste TOO much time reading.

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