Failed my CPCE once — what actually worked the second time around?

by David K. 3 views3 replies
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David K.OP
May 27, 2026

So I finally passed my CPCE last month after failing by just 4 points in February. Honestly it was demoralizing because I thought I'd studied enough — I'd read through my grad school notes, reviewed the eight core areas, and felt pretty confident walking in. Turns out confidence and actual preparedness are two very different things.

What changed the second time was getting serious about timed CPCE practice tests. I'd been reading passively before, but actually sitting down and doing full-length simulations under test conditions showed me exactly where my weak spots were. For me it was Career Development and Group Counseling — I kept second-guessing myself on the theoretical models. I also grabbed a focused study guide that broke down each domain separately instead of treating everything as one blob of information.

My exam tips for anyone currently prepping: don't just review what you know, actively drill the areas that feel uncomfortable. I went from a 94 to a 112 on my second attempt. Happy to share the specific resources that helped if anyone wants details.

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Sarah M.
May 27, 2026
This is really encouraging, thank you. I'm sitting for mine in about six weeks and Career Development is killing me too — specifically Super's developmental theory versus Holland's typology. I've been using a CPCE practice test bank and noticing I consistently miss questions that involve applying theory to a specific client scenario rather than just recalling the theorist's name. Any tips on how you drilled that kind of application thinking?
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Ravi S.
May 28, 2026
Congrats on passing! I took mine last fall and the thing that surprised me most was how heavily it tested multicultural counseling. My grad program covered it but kind of surface-level. I'd seriously recommend any CPCE study guide that dedicates a full chapter to MCT frameworks because at least 15-20% of the questions I saw touched on cultural considerations in some way. Don't underestimate that domain.
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Ravi S.
May 28, 2026
Four points the first time and then jumping to a 112 — that's a massive swing. Goes to show the practice test approach really does work. I think a lot of counseling students underestimate how much test-taking strategy matters on top of content knowledge. Good luck to everyone prepping right now.

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