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CFA Level 1
Chapters

1Introduction to CFA Program

2Ethics and Professional Standards

3Quantitative Methods

4Financial Reporting and Analysis

5Corporate Finance

6Equity Investments

7Fixed Income

8Derivatives

9Alternative Investments

10Portfolio Management and Wealth Planning

11Economics

12Financial Markets

13Risk Management

14Preparation and Exam Strategy

Study TechniquesPractice Exam StrategiesTime Management During ExamKey Formulas to RememberCommon Pitfalls to AvoidNetworking with Other CandidatesUtilizing Cram SessionsFinal Review StrategiesExam Day PreparationPost-Exam Considerations
Courses/CFA Level 1/Preparation and Exam Strategy

Preparation and Exam Strategy

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Effective strategies for preparing for the CFA Level 1 exam.

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Study Techniques

Study Techniques — CFA Level I: The Risk-Managed, No-BS Playbook
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Study Techniques — CFA Level I: The Risk-Managed, No-BS Playbook

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Study Techniques — CFA Level I (Prep & Exam Strategy)

You already wrestled with Risk Appetite, measurement tools, and mitigation strategies. Now treat your study plan like a risk management program for your brain: identify risks (procrastination, topic blind spots), measure them (mock exam scores), and mitigate with surgical study techniques.


Why this matters (short and spicy)

The exam isn't a test of how hard you can cram; it's a test of how well you can structure knowledge, retrieve it under pressure, and survive 6 months of emotional turbulence. Good techniques multiply your efficiency — the same 300 recommended hours can feel like 100 if you study smart.

This section builds on your earlier work in Risk Management: treat your study plan as a portfolio. Your time = capital. Your study techniques = hedges, diversification, and stress tests.


Quick roadmap — what you’ll get here

  • A no-fluff study framework you can implement today
  • Tactical techniques (active recall, spaced repetition, interleaving)
  • Mock-exam & exam-day strategy (time management, triage, guessing)
  • A sample micro-plan and a simple spaced-repetition algorithm

1) Set up the study framework (think: risk appetite for studying)

  • Target hours: Industry wisdom = ~300 hours. Treat this as a guideline, not gospel.
  • Risk appetite: Are you 'aggressive' (cram with heavy mocks late) or 'conservative' (steady, spaced approach)? Choose based on life constraints and past exam history.
  • Measurement tools: Weekly mini-mocks, topic quizzes, and an error log. These are your equivalent of VaR — they tell you where you’re vulnerable.

Actionable: Create a calendar working backward from exam day. Block study sprints (50–90 minutes) and mandatory weekly practice tests.


2) Core study techniques (the ones that actually work)

Active recall (stop re-reading like it's a religion)

  • What: Force retrieval — do questions, explain concepts aloud, write formulas from memory.
  • Why: Retrieval strengthens the memory trace far more than passive reading.
  • How: After reading a LOS, close the book and write a one-paragraph explanation and 3 practice Qs.

Spaced repetition (kiss forgetting goodbye)

  • What: Review material just before you forget it.
  • Why: Efficient — you revisit only when retention decays.
  • How: Use flashcards (Anki, physical), schedule reviews: Day 1, Day 3, Day 7, Day 14, Day 30.

Interleaving (mix like a DJ)

  • What: Study different topics in the same session — e.g., ethics, quant, FRA in one block.
  • Why: Forces discrimination between similar concepts and increases transfer.
  • How: Use mixed sets of practice questions rather than topic-by-topic marathons.

Practice questions + error log (your most valuable dataset)

  • Do thousands of questions. But don’t drown: analyze.
  • Maintain an error log that records: question, why you missed it, rule to apply, and a reference.
  • Weekly: revisit the error log and convert recurring mistakes into micro-drills.

Formula sheet and conceptual ‘cheat’ map

  • Build a living formula sheet as you go (not the night before).
  • Add example triggers (“If you see X, think Y formula”). This is retrieval scaffolding.

3) Tactical study schedule (a sample micro-plan)

  • Total weeks until exam: W
  • Weekly hours: target 10–20 depending on W and life
  • Example month block:
    1. Weeks 1–8: Read + daily practice questions (60% content, 40% practice)
    2. Weeks 9–14: Heavy question phase + error-log remediation (80% practice)
    3. Last 4–6 weeks: Full-length mocks under exam conditions, targeted reviews, formula consolidation

Table: Sample weekly focus (8-hour study week)

Day Activity Time
Mon Read LOS + 20 Qs 1.5 h
Tue Practice set (mixed topics) 1.5 h
Wed Flashcards + error-log review 1 h
Thu Topic deep-dive (weak area) 1.5 h
Fri Mock mini-session (30 Qs) 1 h
Sat Full practice block (3 h) 3 h
Sun Rest / light review 0.5 h

4) Mock exams & exam-day strategy (the battlefield tactics)

  • Simulate conditions: Noise level, time limits, bathroom breaks. Build stamina.
  • Time management: You have ~90 seconds per question. Practice pacing (don’t obsess on any single item).
  • Triage: Quick pass — answer the easy ones first, flag hard ones, return if time.
  • Answer everything: There’s no penalty. Guess smartly (eliminate 1–2 options first).
  • Post-mock analysis: Spend at least 2x the mock time reviewing errors. Look for patterns.

Practical rule: If a question costs you >2 minutes in the real exam, mark and move on. Efficiency > perfection.


5) A tiny pseudocode for spaced repetition (make it automatic)

for each flashcard:
  if new -> review today
  else:
    if recall = easy -> schedule next in +interval*2
    if recall = hard -> schedule next in +1 day
    if forgot -> schedule next in +0.5 day

(Use Anki to automate — or a calendar app if you insist on paper and suffering.)


6) Common traps & how to mitigate them (risk mitigation for students)

  • Trap: Reading the curriculum twice and expecting miracles.
    • Mitigation: Replace second read with question-heavy review and error analysis.
  • Trap: Ignoring Ethics until the end.
    • Mitigation: Integrate Ethics into weekly rotations. Ethics is high-ROI.
  • Trap: Skipping weak, ugly topics (FRA, derivatives).
    • Mitigation: Allocate 2x time to weak topics, and practice micro-drills.

Closing — Key takeaways (read before you study)

  • Study = risk-managed project. Apply appetite, measurement, and mitigation to time and topics.
  • Active recall + spaced repetition + lots of questions = the holy trinity. Reading is seasoning, not the meal.
  • Mocks aren’t a scoreboard — they’re an MRI. Use them to map weaknesses and fix them.

Your brain is not a filing cabinet; it’s a muscle that remembers through use. Train it like an athlete.

Go make a plan, schedule your first mock for next weekend, and start an error log tonight. You’ve already learned how to manage risk — now manage your study risk and you’ll walk into that exam cool, collected, and annoyingly well-prepared.


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