Oh dear. I've seen some pretty whacked out CPA review materials floating around for sale […]
Tag: Studying for the CPA exam
Happy Birthday, Peter Olinto!
A little birdie told me (OK fine, it was Facebook) that today is Peter Olinto's […]
Too Bad Peter Olinto Can’t Teach CPA Exam Candidates To Grow a Pair
When doodling in your CPA review books isn't distracting you like it used to, why […]
A CPA Exam Intervention: The Adderall Problem
After a few weeks of FAR, the studying can start to get to you. If […]
Going Concern CPA Review Survey Results Are Here!
First, thanks to everyone who stepped up and not only provided me great answers but […]
Advice on Taking the CPA Exam From Actual CPA Exam Candidates
I am still in the process of soliciting and collecting CPA review surveys from you […]
CPA Review Students: We Want Feedback on Your Study Program
Hey folks, a concerned reader reached out the other day to vent about their current […]
Future ‘Digital CPAs’ Will Make the Most of Bathroom Breaks Thanks to AICPA’s New CPA Exam App
Put down the Fruit Ninja, folks, the AICPA has a new app for you to […]
Beware Fake or Unauthorized CPA Review Sellers
Back in the day, I used to get people who claimed to be former Becker […]
What’s a Cheap But Effective CPA Review Program?
If you have a CPA exam question for me, get in touch and I'll try […]
Has Anyone Passed the CPA Exam Using a 5 Week Intensive Course?
This may come as a shock to the youngsters out there but a long, long […]
Easy CPA Exam Answers
Sometimes, the answers come easy:
Hello. I am taking the REG and AUD sections of the CPA exam during the latter part of the Oct/Nov testing window. In your opinion, how much “rote memorization” is required to successfully pass the two sections referenced above.
Thank you for your assistance.
DMF
Simple. Zero.
For every hour of CPA review lecture video you watch, you should do 2 – 3 hours of homework for that section. If you rewatch a lecture, I would still do an additional 2 – 3 hours homework (MCQ or practice simulations) for each subsequent viewing. There is no such thing as practicing too much but don’t tell that to people who have scored in the mid to upper 90s.
Rote memorization? I wouldn’t call the effort you put into studying for these sections “rote memorization,” though you will be engaging in repetition (to the point of nausea) to really indoctrinate the concepts into your head.
In order to actually learn the concepts you need to pass, you will need to know why the answers are right and wrong, not just what the answers are. That’s why you don’t hear about people smuggling answers out of Prometric (they could if they really wanted to), it wouldn’t do anyone any good.
You will need to memorize certain concepts (don’t bother remembering every single tax form and SAS) but generally speaking, your most effective strategy is going to be to get in as much practice as you can. That means plowing through questions but thinking about the answers as you do so. Use the guide above to figure out just how many hours you need to put into each section but the “magic number” varies wildly for each candidate, you may need more or you may need less.
