I'm scheduled for this test 8/22. I just joined IC last week and have taken 3 REA practice tests... 2 pass 1 fail. Took 2 of the timed petterson test passed (barely) both 51 & 52 guessed on last ten (ran out of time). It's been 30 years since my last lit. class. . Any suggestions would be helpful..I have read all related posts and have seen mixed responses. Are REA or Pettersons practice tests more indicative of the real thing? I have been studying the terms and would appreciate any/all input for an old guy. I have read and re-read the CLEP test practice manual? I'm a slow reader ; and will confirm time is truly the enemy. Last weekend for my prep. Help!
FROM MERLIN:
I posted my study plan and test taking strategy above, but my best advice is to...
1. Make sure you get the literary terms down (since those are the easiest to study for.) I only ended up with maybe a dozen questions that required those, but my understanding of the terms and their usage helped me better understand the material as well.
2. Study any resources you can find online. Google for things like "interpreting poetry" or "interpreting literature" for some good advice on ways to approach them -- they also direct you to some great examples that may also end up on your test.
3. Try to take all of the REA and Peterson's tests if you can (there are 6, so I'd suggest one a day or every other day) as those helped me quite a bit. When you take the tests, be sure to go back and read through the details and answers, particularly for the ones you miss, as you may find that 1 or more of those examples are on the real test. I know I had one of the poems from the REA test appear in the real test.
Personally, I found that the REA tests were much harder than the real deal and the Peterson's practice tests were about on target. If you can reliably get > 50 on the Peterson's tests, you should pass... in fact my score on the Peterson's pretty much was identical to what I scored on the real test.
Tguns Wrote:I'm scheduled for this test 8/22. I just joined IC last week and have taken 3 REA practice tests... 2 pass 1 fail. Took 2 of the timed petterson test passed (barely) both 51 & 52 guessed on last ten (ran out of time). It's been 30 years since my last lit. class. . Any suggestions would be helpful..I have read all related posts and have seen mixed responses. Are REA or Pettersons practice tests more indicative of the real thing? I have been studying the terms and would appreciate any/all input for an old guy. I have read and re-read the CLEP test practice manual? I'm a slow reader ; and will confirm time is truly the enemy. Last weekend for my prep. Help!I had a tough time with this test as well for much of the same reason. I took 2 weeks to prep for the test since I was not confident in my lit skills, but it paid off for me since my first practice test was a fail as well.
FROM MERLIN:
I posted my study plan and test taking strategy above, but my best advice is to...
1. Make sure you get the literary terms down (since those are the easiest to study for.) I only ended up with maybe a dozen questions that required those, but my understanding of the terms and their usage helped me better understand the material as well.
2. Study any resources you can find online. Google for things like "interpreting poetry" or "interpreting literature" for some good advice on ways to approach them -- they also direct you to some great examples that may also end up on your test.
3. Try to take all of the REA and Peterson's tests if you can (there are 6, so I'd suggest one a day or every other day) as those helped me quite a bit. When you take the tests, be sure to go back and read through the details and answers, particularly for the ones you miss, as you may find that 1 or more of those examples are on the real test. I know I had one of the poems from the REA test appear in the real test.
Personally, I found that the REA tests were much harder than the real deal and the Peterson's practice tests were about on target. If you can reliably get > 50 on the Peterson's tests, you should pass... in fact my score on the Peterson's pretty much was identical to what I scored on the real test.