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- 注册时间
- 2011-7-2
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- 2016-2-5
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10#
发表于 2011-7-13 16:10
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I studied really hard for level 1, came out feeling so-so, ended up passing with flying colors.
For level 2 I used the exact same study methods and structure but the week before the test I started sweating bullets because I couldn't get my head around all the material. I burned myself out, stayed up till 4am the day of the test reading the ethics section which I left for last. I also literally took one half of one practice test the day before the exam as my only real question practice - I didn't want to sacrifice precious minutes learning content to get feedback on material I wouldn't have time to study anyway. I got to the test, the first ethics section was a topic I didn't review at all so I freaked out, guessed a lot. I fumbled through quant methods only to realize I burned almost half the test recalculating problems because I kept arriving at answers that weren't in the choices. My life flashed before my eyes, I had a hot flash, I thought I was done for, wasted hundreds of hours of my life! But I was able to pull it together, decided to salvage what I could, found my confidence and powered through the rest of the test.
I again passed with flying colors except quant methods where I was in the <50% group.
As far as takeaways go, it's really important to remember you can get a lot of questions wrong and still pass so allow yourself to let material go as you study. Can't remember the formula for how warrants impact accounting ratios? Skip it and find a dozen other things to skip to lighten the mental load. I freaked out and working myself into a delirious frenzy studying in the final hours because I didn't want to let material go. I would have crushed quant methods if I was well rested, the rest of the test probably would have gone the same as it did. |
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