GLC exam mistakes I wish someone had warned me about

by David R. 1,295 views5 replies
D
David R.OP
April 14, 2026

I failed my first attempt. Not by much, but enough to have to reschedule. Here's what went wrong and how I fixed it for attempt #2 (which I passed).

Mistake 1: Skimming the question
The GLC exam is full of questions with words like "EXCEPT," "FIRST," "BEST," or "MOST important." I was answering the question I thought I saw, not the one on the screen. Slowing down and reading every word carefully picked up at least 8-10 points on my retake.

Mistake 2: Studying the wrong things deeply
I spent most of my time on GLC - Georgia Librarian Certification content because it seemed most relevant, but the exam was more balanced than I expected. The ITIL - Practitioner sections caught me off guard. Use the official content outline to weight your study time proportionally.

Mistake 3: Not timing myself during practice
I ran out of time on about 12 questions on my first attempt. During my retake prep I did every practice test strictly timed and learned to flag and move on rather than getting stuck.

Mistake 4: Overthinking the answers
For library science exams specifically, when two answers seem equally right, the correct one is usually the one that's safest, most conservative, or most protective of the client/patient/public. That heuristic alone is worth remembering.

Anyone else have first-attempt war stories? I want this thread to be a resource for people going into their first try.

D
David R.
April 14, 2026

The "safest/most conservative answer" heuristic applies to almost every professional certification exam I've taken. It's essentially asking: "What would a cautious, by-the-book professional do?" That framing helped me enormously.

P
Priya S.
April 15, 2026

Thank you for sharing this honestly. The shame around failing an exam is real and it keeps people from talking about what actually helps. I failed my first GLC attempt too and knowing others have been there makes the retake feel less daunting.

M
Maria T.
April 15, 2026

The timing issue is so real. I actually set a timer for 1 min per question during practice until it became instinct to move on when I was stuck. Flagged questions go fast when you're not starting from scratch on them.

C
CertHunter
June 7, 2026

One thing that genuinely saved me for my second attempt was treating the GLC's case study scenarios differently than I had been. I was reading them like a test and jumping to the answer before I really understood what the question was actually asking. Once I slowed down and made myself identify whether they wanted the ethical response, the legally correct one, or the client-centered one, everything clicked. Those three things aren't always the same answer and the exam knows that.

Also if you haven't already, practice with the NASW Code of Ethics open next to you until you don't need it anymore. I know it sounds obvious but I didn't really internalize how much the GLC leans on it until I was sitting in that testing room panicking. It's not about memorizing paragraphs, it's about understanding the hierarchy of obligations so when you see a conflict scenario you already know how to think through it. That shift alone probably added 10 points to my score.

L
LateNightStudy
June 7, 2026
```html

I feel this so much. I'm a working adult with two kids so I wasn't able to study in long stretches — it was more like 20 minutes during lunch, maybe 45 minutes after the kids went to bed. What actually helped me was doing practice questions consistently instead of trying to re-read the material. I found some free glc ethics professional responsibilities questions online and just drilled those because ethics tripped me up the first time more than anything else.

The EXCEPT and BEST wording is real, you have to slow down. I started underlining those words in my head as I read, just mentally flagging them before I even looked at the answers. My second attempt I finished with about 10 minutes to spare and went back through every question I'd flagged. Passed. It's not that the content is impossible, it's that the exam rewards patience and you can actually build that with practice if you're intentional about it.

```
Ready to practice?
Free GLC practice tests with detailed explanations and instant results.
GLC Practice Test

Join the Discussion

Sign in or register to reply with your account, or reply as a guest below.