Failed the SSW — what to do differently the second time

by CertifiedSoon_N 1,433 views6 replies
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CertifiedSoon_NOP
May 23, 2026

Got my results yesterday and didn't pass. I'm frustrated but trying to stay focused on what to fix rather than dwelling on it. Writing this partly to process it and partly because I know others will be in the same spot.

My weakest area was study guide — I knew going in that it was shaky but underestimated how much the exam weighted it. The questions weren't unfair, I just didn't have the depth I needed.

I'm rebuilding my study plan around the ssw consultation & collaboration and going much slower this time — no more rushing through topics I think I know. Also going through school social worker to fill in the conceptual foundation I was missing. Planning to take 6 more weeks before rescheduling.

Anyone else been through a SSW retake? What specifically changed in your approach that made the difference?

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PassedIt2025
May 23, 2026

Late to this thread but wanted to add — the study guide section trips up more people than any other part. If you're scoring below 71% there in practice, treat it as your only focus for at least a week before moving on. Breadth at the expense of depth in that area is a common mistake.

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MotivatedLearner
May 23, 2026

Good thread. One thing I'd add: don't try to cram the night before. I did 2 hours the night before my SSW and I think it hurt more than helped. Your brain needs consolidation time. Light review or full rest is better.

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PracticeTestFan
May 30, 2026

Failed first attempt, came back to this thread. The consensus on ssw practice test being the make-or-break area is right. Focusing almost exclusively on applied questions this time around.

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PassedIt2025
May 30, 2026

Great discussion. One thing nobody mentions: sleep the night before matters more than one more study session. Went in fully rested for my SSW and felt sharper than expected.

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PracticeQueen
July 2, 2026

I'm in almost the exact same boat — failed my first attempt last month and honestly the schedule was my biggest enemy. I work full-time in construction management and was trying to squeeze in an hour here and there whenever I could, which sounds fine in theory but it meant I never built any real momentum. What I'm doing differently now is blocking off Tuesday and Thursday evenings as non-negotiable study time. It's only two hours each but knowing it's locked in means I'm not constantly negotiating with myself about whether to bother.

The study guide section is where I left the most points on the table too. I didn't realize how much weight it carries until I saw my breakdown. I'm treating it like a separate mini-exam now and going through practice questions specifically for that area instead of just doing general mixed sets. If you've got limited time, that targeted approach is probably worth more than trying to review everything equally. It's slower to feel progress but you'll actually plug the holes instead of just reinforcing what you already know.

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MotivatedLearner
July 2, 2026

I was in the exact same place six months ago, so I know how rough that results email feels. What actually helped me turn it around was getting way more specific about my weak spots instead of just "studying more." For me, crisis intervention was the area I kept glossing over because I thought I kind of knew it, but I really didn't — I found a ssw crisis intervention mental health practice test and it humbled me fast. Do those timed so you get used to the pressure.

The other thing I changed was spacing out my review sessions instead of cramming. Sounds obvious but I genuinely wasn't doing it before. Give yourself at least a week of lighter review before the exam so the material can settle. You'll get there.

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