04-08-2015, 11:09 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-08-2015, 11:23 AM by KittenMittens.)
sanantone Wrote:It's easy to find out that taxation is open book because it says so in the test description. No one has to read through 300 pages of tax code.
It was hyperbole, maybe the TECEP Federal Income Taxation was easy for you or in general. I can't say for sure since there's not enough test taker data. The title sounded pretty in-depth and the 4 comments from the instantcert subscriber forum were generally of the opinion that it's was very difficult and laborious. Is it enough to conclude if it's really the case? No, but intuition/gut feeling on how hellish filing taxes is each year, and the 3-4 comments saying it's tough/not easy isn't a good start.
Here's what people wrote for TECEP Federal Income Taxation:
"Summary: This exam isn’t a piece of cake. It is difficult and you can’t fake much if you know what I mean, especially the computational problems. You can’t even guess on those. To be honest, I have NO clue how I did. I saw elsewhere that in addition to a tax guide, that one should google a 1-5 page summary of how to file a tax return to get the basics. I’d agree with this since you need to know the big picture, and how to look up the details. That’s pretty much what this exam comes down to.
"Congratulations on passing. From what I hear it is very challenging. Do you mind sharing which books/study guides you used?"
"Study Method: Get a physical copy of IRS Pub 17 from your local Library or anywhere you can. Read it once. Yes, the whole thing. You will forget most of it, but will be familiar with some of the caveats in some of the regulations. Put tabs on the pages for the glossary and chapters/sections. This will save you time in the test!.... This test is doable! You can do it! Its no walk in the park though!"
Source: http://www.degreeforum.net/specific-exam...ation.html
The other thing to keep in mind is that if TECEP UL exams in general are going to be intrinsically time-intensive to study for, and that though a student can knock out lower level TECEPs that are generally regarded as easy (though there's an absence on info on what people consistently believe is easy let's say the English exam, Math exam, and Computer skills exams are easy), that still leaves about 4 or so TECEP exams to be done so in order to save as much as possible, you'd want to overlap TECEPs with degree requirements otherwise the cost savings will go down. Example: If you took 8 easy TECEPs that don't fulfill degree/major/UL requirements, you'll still have to take exams/coursework in those as well driving the price up.
Maybe if you can come up with a compilation/list of TECEP exams that don't need textbooks and also simultaneously fulfill degree requirements that could help, and and am fully for that. I'm just of the opinion like the OP that reading textbooks is tedious, inefficient, and boring. If data is produced that shows that minimal prep time is needed to pass some/many of these exams especially upper levels, and there enough students to indicate a consistent pass rate of say something like >90% pass rates, then that would be awesome.
A) Why a Charter Oak BS in Business Admin is easier to get than a TESU BS in Business Admin degree.
B) Charter Oak State College's Easy BS in Business Administration Degree Plan + Test Out Options
B.S. in Business Administration, Charter Oak State College 2015
B) Charter Oak State College's Easy BS in Business Administration Degree Plan + Test Out Options
B.S. in Business Administration, Charter Oak State College 2015