Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Which Clep study books do you think were the best?
#1
I did read the readme first. I wanted to find which books do you think are the best or heard are the best.


I am currently looking at this REA clep book for history pre civil war, post civil war, and english.

CLEP History of the United States I, Test Preps, The Staff of REA, Book - Barnes & Noble

I know there are plenty of stuff online but I would like ones I can take around with me.
and if any of you have input such as you used this and studied for a month. you made this grade. it would be great.


Thanks
Reply
#2
To me, all of the REA books are GREAT!
ShotoJuku +
A.S., B.S., M.S., MBA
IC Forums Senior Super Moderator  
Passing It On & Paying It Forward To All Just Starting or Completing Their Educational Journey!

Shoto's Passing Your Exam Advice Here --->   http://www.degreeforum.net/general-educa...#post59179
God Bless The USA :patriot:
Reply
#3
I second what ShotoJuku said! Smile
BA in History, TESC, Graduated September 2010
MA in History, American Public University, currently pursuing
Virginia teaching license, currently pursuing

Check out Degree Forum Wiki for more information on putting together your own degree plan!

My BA History degree plan.
Reply
#4
The best part about the REA books are all the practice tests. Do every single one, read the answers, then take them again.

Downside to REA: All the information you need is in there, but it's very much in a summary form. I would still definitely get the REA book, but for a history CLEP, I would plan to read a history textbook as well, just to get more background. And, of course, use all the IC flashcards!
Reply
#5
I agree; REA is excellent for this exam.

I tried a lot of materials, since this was my first exam. Here is my list:

http://www.degreeforum.net/excelsior-tho...#post52148

Best wishes on your exam!
AS in 2010 and BS in 2013 at Excelsior College - Transcripts and Costs
MS Biostatistics in 2019 at Texas A&M University - Graduate School

Sharing Credit-by-Exam*
Resources Used - 20+ Exams Passed & General GRE
Practice Tests - Available for CLEP and DSST

* Link posted with permission from forum admin; thank you!
Reply
#6
The REA books are good, I would agree.

The biggest complaint I have read about REA is that there are things on the test that aren't in the book.

This is utterly false. The biggest thing to realize is that REA is in summary form, and everyone's learning ability is different.

If you need to read and memorize facts, REA may not be the best. If you are good at reading and applying information, then REA is perfect.

REA expects you to read one paragraph on how the Dutch were an early republic, for instance. You need to be able to internalize that and apply it to a question like:

The Dutch government fostered a mercantile economy by:
1) controlling all aspects of commerce
2) by allocating reasources to nobles and elites
3) not trading in the new world.
4) allowing private companies to facilitate trade for tax

The REA book may only state that the Dutch were merchants and a republic." You have to apply that in ways that rules out every answer but #4.

If you are looking for a book the says word for word the answers, fill in the blank style... good luck!
Reply
#7
studyhard Wrote:The best part about the REA books are all the practice tests. Do every single one, read the answers, then take them again.

Downside to REA: All the information you need is in there, but it's very much in a summary form. I would still definitely get the REA book, but for a history CLEP, I would plan to read a history textbook as well, just to get more background. And, of course, use all the IC flashcards!
ok. looks like i will be getting the rea book. when i am finished with it. i will register for IC and get their flash cards.


Thanks
Reply
#8
Delgadido Wrote:ok. looks like i will be getting the rea book. when i am finished with it. i will register for IC and get their flash cards.


Thanks

You don't have to wait to finish the book before starting the flashcards. Doing the two together might even help you!
Reply
#9
studyhard Wrote:You don't have to wait to finish the book before starting the flashcards. Doing the two together might even help you!

Absolutely!!! :iagree:
ShotoJuku +
A.S., B.S., M.S., MBA
IC Forums Senior Super Moderator  
Passing It On & Paying It Forward To All Just Starting or Completing Their Educational Journey!

Shoto's Passing Your Exam Advice Here --->   http://www.degreeforum.net/general-educa...#post59179
God Bless The USA :patriot:
Reply


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Seeking interviewees with non-accredited/non-traditional degrees for Ohio State Study mitchell1857 0 228 09-10-2024, 02:36 PM
Last Post: mitchell1857
  Large study of over 10,000 participants showed the top 5 careers for millionaires LevelUP 7 708 08-31-2024, 12:53 PM
Last Post: sanantone
  Decide your path of study... bjcheung77 2 309 07-25-2024, 02:11 AM
Last Post: nyvrem
  English 2 CLEP Jennr2z 8 2,028 05-18-2024, 07:11 PM
Last Post: Spyrine
Question How can I Study on my own pace and online like a european? justmemyself 6 925 03-25-2024, 09:14 PM
Last Post: bjcheung77
  How to Study Deetzin 3 541 03-12-2024, 02:43 PM
Last Post: LevelUP
  Study.com --- courses midnite123 9 1,221 02-24-2024, 01:22 PM
Last Post: EE-AE-Engineer
  Shout out to Dustin on the other Channel -Great Books Charles Fout 4 868 12-09-2023, 08:30 AM
Last Post: Charles Fout
  Major Study: Unproctored Online Exams Provide Meaningful Assessment Jonathan Whatley 0 582 11-16-2023, 02:48 PM
Last Post: Jonathan Whatley
  Study.com for World History TECEP bannerfield 4 1,331 09-27-2023, 03:43 PM
Last Post: Avidreader

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)