09-27-2013, 07:20 PM
Well I just passed the beast. It was scary for a guy like me, twenty years removed from my last high school math class. I basically had to teach myself Algebra from scratch. I used the college algebra â instantcert, which took a long long time to go through all 9 sections. Theres no real way to rush through it. I also used the REA book which was good for the 210 practice questions. I skimmed through the material for about 2 months before I did a mega cram session over one week. I probably studied 4-6 hours every day for a week.
I found myself pretty strong in some areas and weaker in others. But I felt I had a decent grasp on everything.
The testâ¦.I began the test. I was given 58 questions and 93 minutes. I thought it would start off easy but it jumped right into a fairly complex question that required the quadratic formula to solve. Took between 2-3 minutes to find an answer I was confident about. The next 10 or so questions went about the same. I was able to solve them but it was taking time. By question 12, I was down to an hour. The time panic set in. The rest of the test was just a race against time.
Overall I made educated guesses on about 15 questions. I felt I could have solved them given more time but I just didnât have it. By the time I had 17 minutes left, I had 19 questions to go. Yikes. Panic really set in at that point.
On my particular test, there were virtually no gimmes. i.e. x-2=10, solve for x. My test had no such questions. The easiest ones were probably 2x2 matrices questions using AD-BC.
There were about 4 fill in the blanks. Also there are 5 choices for multiple choice. Not 4. I probably had 5 where I just had no idea.
By the time I was done, I was pretty scared to see the score. Although I was confident about the questions I spent time answering, I felt I was forced to guess on too many. I almost fell out of my seat when I saw my passing score of 54.
The number one thing about this test is time. You not only need to know how to answer the questions, you need to be able to do them very very quickly. Time is your largest nemesis on this test. With unlimited time, Iâm confident I wouldâve scored much higher. But Iâm happy with a pass. Time to go celebrate. This test completed my AA requirements. Good luck, hope this helps.
I found myself pretty strong in some areas and weaker in others. But I felt I had a decent grasp on everything.
The testâ¦.I began the test. I was given 58 questions and 93 minutes. I thought it would start off easy but it jumped right into a fairly complex question that required the quadratic formula to solve. Took between 2-3 minutes to find an answer I was confident about. The next 10 or so questions went about the same. I was able to solve them but it was taking time. By question 12, I was down to an hour. The time panic set in. The rest of the test was just a race against time.
Overall I made educated guesses on about 15 questions. I felt I could have solved them given more time but I just didnât have it. By the time I had 17 minutes left, I had 19 questions to go. Yikes. Panic really set in at that point.
On my particular test, there were virtually no gimmes. i.e. x-2=10, solve for x. My test had no such questions. The easiest ones were probably 2x2 matrices questions using AD-BC.
There were about 4 fill in the blanks. Also there are 5 choices for multiple choice. Not 4. I probably had 5 where I just had no idea.
By the time I was done, I was pretty scared to see the score. Although I was confident about the questions I spent time answering, I felt I was forced to guess on too many. I almost fell out of my seat when I saw my passing score of 54.
The number one thing about this test is time. You not only need to know how to answer the questions, you need to be able to do them very very quickly. Time is your largest nemesis on this test. With unlimited time, Iâm confident I wouldâve scored much higher. But Iâm happy with a pass. Time to go celebrate. This test completed my AA requirements. Good luck, hope this helps.