hbbnt wrote: » take it when you feel ready and confident to take it. it will probably be the point when you feel you have studied everything and there is no more reviewing that will help you
poszeone wrote: » as far as i go, i took the test in mid june and failed (653), went back and studyed the all in one book,learned some things i missed the 1st time around.at this point i feel as i don't know if am ready or not as if i just don't know if i study too much - over study or under study. i guess i'll just book the test for aug and found out. i just have the feeling like "well,ok " and thinking i hope i pass type of feeling . i guess i confidence level got hit after failing the 1st time.
poszeone wrote: » just really wondering about something ...most people from what i have seen on here take 2-3 mo. of study then pass. i have been doing it longer. i feel like i may be taking to long or does it really matter ? i am getting to know alot that i know for sure (then again there's alot to know) . i had no idea it would be like this. software side of thing's(ie windows and programs) are much easyer for me, this i do know.(or at i feel this way)
bigmantenor wrote: » 2-3 months is probably the average, but there is a lot of variance. As an example, it took me about a month of solid study, but my brother has been "studying" for around a year now (his study methods are questionable, but that's another story lol). It depends on your study habits, how quickly you learn, your drive, whether or not you work (takes away from study time), etc. I don't think you should feel you are taking too long necessarily, but there is nothing wrong with trying to speed up your attack. The A+ tests on a great deal of minutia (as I'm sure you know), so half the battle is learning what is important for the test vs. real life. If you're having trouble studying, you should look in to making a study schedule. Take a night off and plan out what you're going to study tomorrow, and then the next day, and so on. Don't put too much on one night. Once you have the plan, then execute. If tonight is motherboards, take read you text/take notes on motherboards (perhaps even do some research online). Then, if tomorrow is RAM, read/take notes on RAM, and then study your notes from yesterday on motherboards. Repetition really helps me out when studying for tests that are mostly rote memorization.