Well, I have just now felt like signing on and thinking about last Friday's exam. I am pretty sure I did not make it. I started out well. I worked several morning problems and thought this is not too bad. However, I was successfully working problems, but time was my enemy. I had to guess/straightline 8 out of 40. The am was not bad, but I did not pace myself well and ran out of time. I really regret not taking a timed practice exam before hand to get a feel for how quickly the problems had to be worked.
The afternoon was like a kick in the nuts! I got the exam after lunch determined to work faster, but the problems were more in depth. I could certainly work the problems, but much much slower. There are no "Gimmi problems" in the pm portion. I really "f" up the afternoon portion. Probably only worked 10 correctly. This is an open book exam, but if you have to open the book for every problem, you are doomed.
I need to put together a new study plan and get started preparing for april. New plan will include the following plus?:
1) Working breadth style problems over and over to build speed.
2) taking time to work a couple "timed" sample exams
3) Work as many MD depth style problems as possible.
4) Keep a log of study time. I think this might help build confidence knowing how much you studied.
Let me know if anyone has any advice.
The afternoon was like a kick in the nuts! I got the exam after lunch determined to work faster, but the problems were more in depth. I could certainly work the problems, but much much slower. There are no "Gimmi problems" in the pm portion. I really "f" up the afternoon portion. Probably only worked 10 correctly. This is an open book exam, but if you have to open the book for every problem, you are doomed.
I need to put together a new study plan and get started preparing for april. New plan will include the following plus?:
1) Working breadth style problems over and over to build speed.
2) taking time to work a couple "timed" sample exams
3) Work as many MD depth style problems as possible.
4) Keep a log of study time. I think this might help build confidence knowing how much you studied.
Let me know if anyone has any advice.