3 comments

  • Monday, Apr 19 2021

    Contrary to popular belief, I don't think it's the number of hours you put in that matters but how you study with the hours that you can dedicate to the exam. Sure you could do 8 hours a day but practice bad habits and end up not at your goal score. Of course you need to put in a sufficient number of hours every week, it seems like you have more than enough time to do 20-25 hours per week to study, which is more than enough so long as you have the right habits.

    You also have to take the 800 hours on the sage scheduling w/ a grain of salt. If you look through it, you are expected to do every PT 1-89 + M20. Not very realistic even for someone with all the free time in the world.

    I would suggest though to have at least 2 months before the exam taking full prep tests. That's at least 8 full tests, possibly more if you have enough time to take 2 or 3 per week (I say 2 max is enough). And again w/ taking prep tests it's not really how many you take but how well you review your tests afterwards, make a plan to improve on your weaknesses/sharpen your strengths, and make the exam a habit.

    0
  • Monday, Apr 19 2021

    @kostyaterekhov110 said:

    Bro you might want to reevaluate doing 8 hours a day. Studying for that long might just give you diminishing returns.

    For sure.

    0
  • Monday, Apr 19 2021

    Bro you might want to reevaluate doing 8 hours a day. Studying for that long might just give you diminishing returns.

    8

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