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Topic History of : Today failed my first exam attempt
Max. showing the last 6 posts - (Last post first)
5 years 4 months ago #16049 | |
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Wesley Gilmer, PE, PMP
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Hey Anonymous, I failed my first as well. 12/21. If you were clock watching, did you notice the first half being less difficult and the second half being more difficult. I seemed to have trouble keeping pace in the second half. Then again, maybe fatigue set in. It seems like I had to read the question twice over much more later in the exam.
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5 years 4 months ago #16044 | |
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Joe Pang
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Hi Rawand,
Yes you are right, it's not about telling you the # of additional exam questions you need to do. You will know when you are ready, and all you need to do is self evaluation. 1. Set a goal, and a metric that represents success. For me, I wanted to score at least 4ATs in three consecutive mock exams. 2. Do tons of mock 3. Don't let a set exam date to distract your study. Instead, when you are ready, then it is the time for you to book the exam. |
5 years 4 months ago #16043 | |
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Rawand Amin
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Thanks joe for your support. At leaset it ease the pain.
Basically from waht you are sayining ,one exam simulator is not sufficient to pass the exam i have to try different types. Some people have covered. 7000 question to pass the exam. My concern this may take me upto 3 more monthes to cover all that. Although it id irrelevant to ask how many more I skould do, but still i would like to hear from you how many more question I shoulg cover to give a confdence to pass the exam and and from which source, considering my exam score below. Also do you suggest that i should try other simulator or just go fo Rita v9, lehmann, etc). Followings were my exam score Initiating : Above Target Planning: below target Executing: need improvement Monitoring and Controlling:: Below Target Closing: above target Thanks Rawand |
5 years 4 months ago #16008 | |
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Joe Pang
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Hi Rawand,
I totally understand how you felt during the exam. I too was a little panic when I read the first 50 or so questions. Now that you have seen the actual exam, you know that the question style is a bit different than Prepcast, which is normal because it's a different team that writes the exam question. I would recommend doing a variety of different exam simulations (I did Rita v9, Lehmann, etc). That would acclimatize you for various types of question styles. I agree skipping a question if you finding it difficult to understand, or you couldn't decide which is the right answer. I would also categorize these reasons, and mark them on your scrap paper. So that when you go back to these questions you'll know exactly where to resume. When you feel you are ready, book the exam. Try not to study 24-48 hours before the exam date, do something you like (I went for a motorcycle ride and massage) instead. On the day of exam, exercise in the morning, get your oxygen level up; Also I usually have a chat with people in the exam waiting room, that helps me to relieve stress as well. During the exam, remember to breath, pace yourself, close your eyes for a few second if you are tired, take short breaks to rehydrate, etc. Good Luck! |
5 years 4 months ago #15973 | |
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Joe Pang
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Hi Rawand,
I totally understand how you felt during the exam. I too was a little panic when I read the first 50 or so questions. Now that you have seen the actual exam, you know that the question style is a bit different than Prepcast, which is normal because it's a different team that writes the exam question. I would recommend doing a variety of different exam simulations (I did Rita v9, Lehmann, etc). That would acclimatize you for various types of question styles. I agree skipping a question if you finding it difficult to understand, or you couldn't decide which is the right answer. I would also categorize these reasons, and mark them on your scrap paper. So that when you go back to these questions you'll know exactly where to resume. When you feel you are ready, book the exam. Try not to study 24-48 hours before the exam date, do something you like (I went for a motorcycle ride) instead. On the day of exam, exercise in the morning, get your oxygen level up; Also I usually have a chat with people in the exam waiting room, that helps me to relieve stress as well. During the exam, remember to breath, pace yourself, close your eyes for a few second if you are tired, take short breaks to rehydrate, etc. Good Luck! |
5 years 4 months ago #15972 | |
---|---|
Joe Pang
|
Hi Rawand,
I totally understand how you felt during the exam. I too was a little panic when I read the first 50 or so questions. Now that you have seen the actual exam, you know that the question style is a bit different than Prepcast, which is normal because it's a different team that writes the exam question. I would recommend doing a variety of different exam simulations (I did Rita v9, Lehmann, etc). That would acclimatize you for various types of question styles. I agree skipping a question if you finding it difficult to understand, or you couldn't decide which is the right answer. I would also categorize these reasons, and mark them on your scrap paper. So that when you go back to these questions you'll know exactly where to resume. When you feel you are ready, book the exam. Try not to study 24-48 hours before the exam date, do something you like (I went for a motorcycle ride and massage) instead. On the day of exam, exercise in the morning, get your oxygen level up; Also I usually have a chat with people in the exam waiting room, that helps me to relieve stress as well. During the exam, remember to breath, pace yourself, close your eyes for a few second if you are tired, take short breaks to rehydrate, etc. Good Luck! |
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