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EXAM TECHNIQUE

Forums › Ask ACCA Tutor Forums › Ask the Tutor ACCA AAA Exams › EXAM TECHNIQUE

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 7 years ago by MikeLittle.
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
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  • February 6, 2018 at 2:20 pm #435485
    sgaosikelwe
    Member
    • Topics: 1
    • Replies: 2
    • ☆

    I have sat for P7 four times trying all the possible techniques but realised that they are not working for me.
    sir is it possible to just answer one past paper, exactly the way the examiner wants me to answer so that may be i can understand how she want my answers to be.
    i understand that some times we overwrite /underwrite our answers. i sometimes thinks that may be i am not brief to the point.

    February 6, 2018 at 3:01 pm #435489
    MikeLittle
    Keymaster
    • Topics: 27
    • Replies: 23303
    • ☆☆☆☆☆

    My own answers would (hopefully!) be similar to the suggested solution … except for the unholy length and detail that the suggested solutions indulge in

    But here’s what I strongly advise for both P1 and P7 examinees

    Try it … because your previous 4 methods have failed to bring the desired result

    For the next 2 weeks, just read, read and read again and again (if you can bring yourself to do it!) the questions and answers from a revision kit

    Then, 2 weeks before the exam it’s time to practice your own answers and examination technique

    Have you noticed that invariably the marking scheme for auditing answers is based upon the rule of thumb, one sentence, one markable point, one mark

    Incidentally, you may also have noticed that the presentation of “official” auditing answers is rather less than reader-friendly … so we need to correct that by breaking down our answers into easily digestible points

    Hopefully you now accept that “one sentence, one markable point, one mark” principle and we know in advance how many marks there are available and how many minutes there are in which to score those marks

    One of the recurrent comments from ACCA in any written paper is that “there continues to be a lack of visible evidence of the planning process”, so we need to address that point too

    Planning gives an answer direction and structure and results in a more professional attempt that an unplanned answer

    But how long to spend on planning?

    Take the number of marks in a question (or part question) and divide by 2 and that will give you the number of minutes that should be devoted to planning that question (or part question)

    So in a 35 mark question 1, 17.5 minutes is devoted to planning an answer that addresses ALL parts of that question

    But a 35 mark question has a total time allocation in the exam of 63 minutes and, if you spend 17.5 minutes planning, you will have only 45.5 minutes to write out your plan in proper structured sentences, properly headed, logically sequenced, and sufficient to score you a pass mark

    35 marks, 45.5 minutes

    That’s just 1.3 minutes per sentence. 1 minute 18 seconds to write a sentence

    So how long are your sentences? Do you KNOW precisely how much you can write in 1 minute 18 seconds? There’s no thought involved – you already know what you are going to say because you’ve planned your answer. This is just a mechanical exercise of writing

    Do it NOW.

    Get a book, revision kit, newspaper, washing machine instruction manual, TV times, girlie magazine … a pen, a clean sheet of paper and a friend with a stopwatch.

    Open the book (or whatever else you have chosen to copy from) and get your friend to say “Start”.

    You copy from that printed document … legibly … until your friend says after 1 minute 18 seconds “Stop”.

    How much have you written? Unless your handwriting is unusually large, I doubt that you have written more than 3 lines.

    And that represents the MAXIMUM length of any single sentence in your exam answers.

    That sentence contains just ONE markable point.

    OK, now you know the length of a sentence.

    Now address the non-reader-friendly presentation of the ‘official’ answers … simple. Leave a line between your sentences.

    I’ll show you what a difference it makes:

    Here are my last 8 points again …

    “Get a book, revision kit, newspaper, washing machine instruction manual, TV times, girlie magazine … a pen, a clean sheet of paper and a friend with a stopwatch. Open the book (or whatever else you have chosen to copy from) and get your friend to say “Start”. You copy from that printed document … legibly … until your friend says after 1 minute 18 seconds “Stop”. How much have you written? Unless your handwriting is unusually large, I doubt that you have written more than 3 lines. And that represents the MAXIMUM length of any single sentence in your exam answers. That sentence contains just ONE markable point. OK, now you know the length of a sentence. Now address the non-reader-friendly presentation of the ‘official’ answers … simple. Leave a line between your sentences.”

    Which format do you prefer? Which is easier to read? Which format reduces the chances that a marker will miss a markable point because it’s lost in the middle of a
    b o r i n g paragraph?

    Now we’ve addressed:

    overall time allocation,
    question time allocation,
    the way to achieve sufficient marks for the individual questions, and
    presentation of answers

    Finally, you need to start practicing the planning exercise so that it doesn’t come as a surprise to you on March 5

    Pick any question at random from a revision kit

    Calculate your planning time (marks / 2)

    Read the question requirement(s)

    Read the question

    Start planning

    Just one word bullet points, not full sentences. This plan is for YOUR benefit and is a way to jog your memory when it comes to writing down your thoughts.

    It serves also to make more easy the collection of similar thoughts

    It makes it easier to determine appropriate headings for the collection of similar points

    It also helps to prevent unnecessary repetition within the separate parts of your answers (“as previously mentioned in part (a) above …”)

    It assists in structure

    It avoids the unprofessional afterthoughts that are squeezed in down the margin of the answer booklet

    And it satisfies the ACCA’s recurrent comment about a “lack of visible evidence …”

    If you have selected a 25 marker for this exercise, STOP planning after 12.5 minutes

    Now ask yourself these questions:

    Have I planned answers for every part of the question?
    Have I raised sufficient points in each part to get me a pass mark
    How many planned points do I have in total – is it 13+?

    Now check out the printed solution. As you read through that printed answer, try to find the markable point within each sentence of that solution (there isn’t always one point in a sentence, and sometimes there are multiple points within one sentence)

    Annotate the markable points in the margin as you read through (or highlight them) but avoid the danger of simply covering the entire answer with yellow highlight ink! On reflection, better to annotate in the margin. A one-word summary of the main point within that sentence

    Then compare with your own efforts and see WHY the ones in the answer were relevant and ask Why you hadn’t included them in your plan (if you hadn’t)

    What if, within the allocated planning time, you can’t get near the required number of marks within your plan? When I was a student I remember reading answers and saying “Yes, I knew that, and that, and that …”

    So why didn’t I write them down in my plan?

    Read this article:

    “General Exam Technique”

    You’ll find it towards the bottom of the P7 home page on this site

    If you’re stuck with an insufficiency of planned points (you’ve only got three things to say for a 10 mark part-question), we need more

    Read the question requirement again – can you maybe interpret it wider and open up a further avenue of thought?

    Can you make 2 points out of one planned point?

    Can you make 2 points by avoiding the word “and”?

    Is there an “and” in the question indicating that there are 2 separate points to this 10 mark part question? For example “Compare and contrast” or “What evidence should you expect to find on the audit file and what further procedures would you recommend”

    If none of those work, take one of your planned points and think of a way of saying it again but without using any of the same words (other than ‘a’, ‘the’ ‘it’ and similar insignificant words)

    Yes, I am suggesting that you repeat the point in your answer whilst avoiding expressions that emulate those used previously (and that’s an example of precisely what I mean!)

    Now you’re into the exercise of planning answers. It probably won’t come naturally to you but you have two weeks to practice the technique

    Let’s hope it works!

    Let me know how you’re getting on

    OK?

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