Failed CA exam twice — what actually works for studying?

by Jordan L. 0 views3 replies
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Jordan L.OP
May 27, 2026

So I've been at this for a while and honestly starting to feel like I'm spinning my wheels. Failed my first attempt back in February with a 68 (needed a 75) and just got my second score back — 71. Getting closer but I've already spent way more time and money than I planned on this thing.

My current approach has been reading through the official materials and watching YouTube videos, but I don't think it's sticking the way it needs to. A coworker mentioned she used a CA practice test site that simulates the real exam format and said that's what finally got her over the line. I've also seen people mention following a structured study guide rather than just reading chapters randomly. Has anyone found a specific method that actually clicks for this exam?

I'm giving myself 8 weeks before my next attempt. Working full-time so realistically maybe 1.5 hours a day on weekdays, more on weekends. Would love to hear what exam tips actually made a difference for people who passed on their third try or later — no judgment here, just want to know what worked.

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Samantha C.
May 28, 2026
I was in almost the exact same spot — scored a 72 on attempt two and passed with an 81 on my third. The biggest shift for me was doing timed practice tests every single week instead of just reading. Like actually sitting down for the full session under test conditions. I'd review every wrong answer after, not just note the correct one but actually look up why I got it wrong. That process probably doubled how much I retained compared to just re-reading chapters.
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Jordan L.
May 28, 2026
Honestly the study guide thing is real. I tried going through materials in a random order based on what felt weak and it was a mess. When I finally followed a structured week-by-week plan it forced me to cover stuff I kept putting off. Also — and this is maybe obvious — the last two weeks before your exam should be almost entirely practice questions, not new content. Your brain needs retrieval practice more than new information at that point.
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Alex G.
May 28, 2026
8 weeks with 1.5 hrs/day is plenty if you're consistent. Don't cram the night before — seriously, sleep matters more than one more review session. You're clearly close already, a 71 means you know most of this stuff. Good luck on the next one.

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