Missing 3 questions- what should I do next?

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    Martin4398

    In the same boat having used the same resources, with exactly 3 questions off on my last attempt as well. Looking forward to hearing what others have to say.

    Best of luck with your future attempt!

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    Ralph Hale

    Hi CC2696, 

    I see a lot of people who were extremely close - in a revise and resubmit situation where they need to spend the vast majority of their review time maintaining the knowledge they have and retest as soon as the 60-day wait is over - but they don't realize it and spend all of the time in the 2 months before their retake reviewing new topics and forget a third or more of what they knew before their first attempt (6 months between doesn't help either - your mind is a leaky bucket, and there is a lot to forget for especially PPD and PDD).  

    What are your 3 digit scaled scores from those two attempts?  The calculator is great for showing you which content areas you actually have space to get enough questions correct in, but it makes some assumptions that tend to underestimate how close you actually were to passing. 

    Best,
    Ralph, the Amber Book Team

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    cc2696

    Hi Ralph,

    They were 514& 510

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    piyarudee

    I was on the same boat for PPD and PDD - failed 2 times a piece with just a couple questions missed. Your materials look legit for PDD though. Maybe more practice tests. 

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    Ralph Hale

    Hi CC2696, 

    That's 2-3 questions from passing.  Half of all divisions taken score within 4 questions either side of the cut score (when you're very close to passing, the way the score report calculator handles the range of questions within each content area tends to slightly overestimate the number of questions you were from passing) - 25% pass by 1-4 questions above the cut score, 6% exactly pass, 5% each don't pass by 1,2,3 questions, 4%  don't pass by 4 questions.  That means by far the most important thing for your retake is maintaining the knowledge you've built - plan for 75% of your study time preparing for your retake to be review your notes on the topics you know - our minds are leaky buckets, and you have to actively keep them full!  Trust your professional judgement, don't second-guess yourself and change answers when you're feeling wishy-washy at the end of the exam, read the questions carefully - you should be ending with no more than 20 minutes or so for review, if you're ending with more time you're likely reading the questions too quickly and missing at least a couple that you shouldn't be missing.  Remember - you only need a small adjustment to get over the line, all the work you've done so far has clearly been effective.

    Best,
    Ralph, the Amber Book Team

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