CPA Exams Cover Everything!

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  • #157410
    75 CPA
    Participant

    College was a piece of cake. I can teach anyone to be a 4.0 student. These CPA exams are something that I have never faced, however. I am teaching myself 50% of the material and with good review materials, learning the material is not a problem. The problem is the volume of material to learn. It just never ends.

    Do not think for a moment that college prepared you for these CPA exams. The CPA exams cover twice the material that I had in college, but not in the same depth. I literally needed three cost accounting texts to cover all of the variance analysis questions on the business exam. Additionally, I have four intermediate accounting texts for the financial exam. If you just waltz into these professional exams like this was college, you will limp out of these exams with a failing grade.

    All of the CPA candidates who took Becker with me have failed. They failed because they used the same study habits that they used in college. They crammed with Becker. That will not work. The CPA exams are not about short-term memory. These professional exams are about long-term memory on more subjects than Becker covers.

    Short-term memory will not work with these exams. Only long-term memory will work. One of the major points of long-term memory is to study a little every day, even if it is only for 10 minutes. It is better to study 10 minutes for six days than it is to study once for 60 minutes. Additionally, I am using more than one review program. After I finish one program I go into another review program.

    Pick your review materials carefully. You will not pass the CPA exams without good review materials! If I had to pick the best review course, I would pick Yaeger. No one matches his personal help. If it were not for Yeager, I would have failed the REG using Becker and Gleim. Yaeger is a teaching course. Becker is a fast paced review program for students who have a solid academic foundation. Gleim does not have a teacher; however, I use their multiple choice questions and simulations.

    No review course can cover all of the subjects tested. Therefore, I am now using the strengths of each review program to help me pass. I would rather spend the money now then have to retake these CPA exams!

    Those three initials, CPA, do not come cheaply! I have no friends, no family and no life. That is the price that I have to pay to pass each of these exams the first time. Each of these CPA exams is a monster. Studying for these exams is a full-time job. Good review materials and serious study equals success

Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 39 total)
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  • #340426
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    When friends wonder why I have to study so much, I try to explain that EACH test covers more material than is covered during a whole semester of college. Of course they don't get it and say “you're so smart, you'll do fine…”

    #340427
    Guccimane
    Participant

    yeah total recall

    I tell everyone college is cake and they do not believe it

    well college is a joke after these exams; that's my only motivation to go back and get a degree in something that pays more money……but what everything is in the dumps and the dollar is weaker then that guy who runs Apple

    83 Reg, 76 BEC, 94 Aud, 79 Far

    Done ......!

    #340428
    live42
    Participant

    I think that everyone studies differently. If you are the type of person who can't cram for a test, thats fine, thats just the way that you study. I for one am the type of person that does best by cramming for a test. I studied almost every waking minute for FAR for about 3 weeks before the test (after months of starting to study and then getting too busy or lazy), and passed. Today, a month and a half later, there is no way I would score as highly as I did if I retook it.

    Its also really strange what you say about the managerial accounting. I agree that there were a lot of variances in the review material (I only used becker). However, I saw the vast majority of these in college. I would say that BEC only covers about 25% of the managerial accounting, (and in much less depth) that I studied in college. Then again, my managerial class was one of the hardest classes I ever took.

    I studied about 35 hours in 5 days, (3 work days and a weekend) for BEC, and I don't know my score yet, but I will report back when I find out on tuesday.

    I however do agree with you about becker. I couldn't imagine using becker without recently graduating from school with a degree in accounting. I do however think it does a good job of covering the material.

    FAR - 91 BEC - 83 REG - 83 AUD - 96

    #340429
    75 CPA
    Participant

    “The will to win is important, but the will to prepare is vital (Joe Paterno). “

    “True success comes from what I call “channeled ambition.” That is the deep desire that gives you the strength to get up and do the dull and boring stuff that you have to do in order to be successful. In other words, channeled ambition provides you with the energy needed to prepare yourself for success-not just occasionally but every day. And, that is very tough because preparation can be truly boring so that it can be easy to fall back on shortcuts. We are hyperactive people; we love shortcuts. I'm convinced that most people fool themselves into believing that shortcuts work as well as real preparation (and that just isn't the case). It takes incredible self-discipline to skip the shortcuts and do the preparatory work every day. Do you have channeled ambition (CPAreviewforFREE)?”

    #340430
    live42
    Participant

    Don't get me wrong, I put in the time for FAR, I just compressed a lot of studying into a short number of weeks. After all, I don't think anyone really cares how well they do on this test as long as its a 75 or better!

    FAR - 91 BEC - 83 REG - 83 AUD - 96

    #340431
    financeguy
    Participant

    A major factor of the CPA exam, and all exams in general, is the general ability of figuring out how to take an exam, and the proper way to prepare you for it.

    I like to work out, so I will use an exercise analogy. Just about anything that you do in the gym is going to help you and get you exercise. The important thing is to be as efficient as you can. One person can spend 6 hours a week in the gym and see much better results than another person who spends 12 hours a week.

    Same can apply with study hours for the cpa exam. One person can be much more efficient and effective w/ their studying, than can another person.

    AUD - 81, BEC - 74, 80, FAR - 82, REG - 81
    Done!

    #340432
    Soanxious
    Participant

    75 CPA – Your first post is dead on. I started with Becker, I took the class on-line, I did everything they told me, and failed all four exams in six months. I thought you take the class, you take the test, boom your done. And I did study like I did in college, and my college didn't teach a percentage of what is on this exam. After failing all the exams I focused on audit. After two more attempts at AUD I finally figured out I was not studying right and the materials were lacking the content I needed (blew one more try (ran myself out of time) and I am still waiting for the score for the last try). I personally learn better in a more comprehensive environment so I have taken now other prep courses material and combined it to what I felt I needed to get it to stick. I have found each of them are good for something, but combined they are more powerful.

    IL - 11/24 AUD

    Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising up every time we fail. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

    #340433
    75 CPA
    Participant

    Soanxious:

    Thank you for your kind words. We have very similar stories. I think that we learn more than those who pass all four exams on the first try. Failure is a powerful teacher.

    This is my experience: I bought the entire Becker program in their live mode five years ago. I had also recorded Becker's lectures for FAR. Additionally, I had the full current Gleim program. I was unaware that other review programs existed until I found another71.com. I called Dr. Yaeger a month before my FAR exam, and I realized that I would fail FAR, based upon studying out-of-date materials, etc. Additionally, I was really frustrated with Becker and Gleim. I had wasted a year of my life studying FAR with Gleim and an old version of Becker. I failed FAR in August, 2008 with a 68.

    However,I was impressed with Dr. Yaeger's helpful attitude when I called him a month before my FAR exam. I bought his FAR review 30 days before my FAR exam in August, 2008. However, it was the proverbial too little and too late. I rushed through Yaeger's program for FAR in 30 days. I was learning something new every hour! That was not a good sign.

    I learned a lot from my failure in FAR, my first exam. I learned that that I made just about every mistake a person could make studying for these CPA exams. Therefore, I threw all of my old books and study materials into the trash. Like you, I now use the best of each review course to form my own study plan.

    Last year I took 3 exams and I passed 3 exams. All I want to do now is to put this baby to bed.

    #340434
    Soanxious
    Participant

    75 CPA – We do have very similar stories. I started with Becker for college credit in 2007. After I did the four exams and failed I focused on AUD. I am now at eight exam attempts total (all four the first time, and four AUD attempts). I am so hoping to see a passing score from AUD from 1/5. It is very encourging to see you started like I did and you passed three.

    I was also like you not knowing there was anything else out there. I bought the Gleim books / lectures around the time I took Becker for credit and I used the lectures the most but not anything else. I have purchased I can't even tell you how many Becker books as time rolled on and I kept attempting. I wrote their books out, I underlined them, you name it, and still didn't pass. Then I started researching and finding things, and I found this site. I was so glad to find there were others out there that were like me. I would read posts (and still do) and found that almost word for word people were having the same problems, finding the same things, frustrated as I was. I now hopefully found what works for me the way I need to retain the material. I am at approx 14k into this test, and 3 years of my life. I understand the material. I was a great student in school I just have to find how to retain it when you don't know what is going to be tested, and that is the trick to it.

    May your journey be done soon! :O)

    IL - 11/24 AUD

    Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising up every time we fail. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

    #340435
    75 CPA
    Participant

    Soanxious

    AUD is my last exam. I took the AUD exam 2 weeks ago. However, I went to bat with a short stick. I only studied for 8 weeks. I took the exam before I was ready. However, I only can lose $300. It was worth the gamble. My expiration date is July 10. I will nail AUD in May if I did not make it this time.

    I am now doing some light studying with Bob Monette's Hot Spots and Intensive Review (Bisk). Bob Monette and Dr. Plil Yaeger make up for my deficient college education in accounting! I am paying for the lack of rigor and lack of accounting courses at my state college. My 4.0 GPA in both undergraduate and graduate courses mean nothing on these CPA exams!

    We both got a slow start out of the gate. However, now that we know how to prepare for these exams, there is nothing that can stop us from crossing the finish line!

    #340436
    plccasngl
    Participant

    75 CPA, what school did you get your undergrad degree because the classes I took from my school are not as easy as you said. I had to put a lot of effort (meaning study everyday and consistently do homework) to earn an A?

    #340437
    75 CPA
    Participant

    plccasngl

    I went to 3 universities. I have 250 credit hours and 3 degrees. All of that means absolutely nothing.

    What does an “A” mean? I do not have any idea. Therefore, I always went for 100s in college. I always had the goal of having the top grades in each class. A 4.0 GPA does not mean that I am smart. It just means that I am very competitive, and a perfectionist. These CPA exams are a different ball game. I do not think that an “A” student has any advantage over a “C” student.

    I have a new philosophy. A score of “75” means that you passed. “76” means that you studied too much. “75” does not mean that you barely passed. No one will ever know your grades, unlike college where your grades will stay with you for the rest of your life. Perfection is the enemy of good enough. A CPA is a CPA.

    CPA exams cover everything. What percentage of the CPA exams did your college courses cover? My courses covered less than 50% of the material. Bottom line: My college courses did not prepare me for these CPA exams. These CPA exams are not a review of your college courses!

    These CPA exams are all about endurance. If you refuse to quit, you will become a CPA! Where there is a will, there is a way.

    #340438
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    This thread is one of the best on this forum.

    Two degrees later (magna cum-laude and suma cum-laude), I feel like the CPA exam is the hardest challenge yet. I have always put forth the effort to get successful results in my life, so failing FAR was quite a humbling experience for me. At first I was depressed but now I am determined to kick FAR's butt.

    #340439
    wanttobeacpa
    Participant

    Hello Guys,

    I am new here. I graduate last year with Accounting. I am planning to take CPA.

    I am not clear on the how to take exam. Let say if I take BEC in May2010. Do i need to finish all the 4 parts by May 2011?

    Or Is it that I have to pass BEC by May 2011. I want to take my time on taking these part by part.

    Please advise me which part should take first and which books are good. I have becker review but it is old from 2005.

    So i am planing to buy 1 update version. any advise will be appreciated.

    #340440
    LSU_BR
    Participant

    Once you pay for your NTS, you have a certain number of months (varies by state, I believe) to sit for the sections you paid for. Once you pass a section, you have a certain number of months (varies by state, I believe) to pass the remaining sections before they start to expire.

    AUD 95 (3/5/10); BEC 83 (5/28/10); FAR 71, 72, 74, 82 (10/16/10); REG 65,80(11/23/10)
    ALL DONE 🙂

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