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Insurance Institute of London. Website : www.iilondon.co.ukLecture Scripts2003 / 20049th February 2004 How to Study and Revise1st March 2004 How to Pass CII ExaminationsPlease visit website
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1. How to Pass Diploma and ACII Examinations Len Wilkins FCII
Consultant, Wellington plc
& Chris Paine Dip CII
Independent Training Consultant & Advisor
3. For those of you who have cracked exams, hearty congratulations, but for mere mortals, here are some thoughts
Exam technique is frequently the difference between passing and failing
Every exam requires special techniques multi-choice, short answers, essay answers
4. Even well-prepared candidates can get things wrong by misreading questions or running out of time
Contrary to popular belief, the CII really does want you to pass first time !
5. So far its been studying Objectives - not too many maximum 2 exams per sitting
Study, Study, Study
Take course textbook apart and rewrite it
Complete all assignments especially Continuous Assessments
6. Have you covered all main topics in syllabus ?
Look at past exam papers - check style
Organise yourself - time for fun & time to study
8 weeks before exam its revise, revise, revise - but you can only revise what youve already learned So far its been studying
7. CII Examiners are sent a grid showing syllabus points and when topics were last examined
Carrying out same exercise is a great idea, so get examination guides for the last four examination sessions
6.00 (+ VAT) from CII website : www.cii.co.uk or by e-mail to publishing@cii.co.uk Hint
8. Use techniques that work for you
Passive Revision - learning, reviewing notes, re-expressing facts, concepts and ideas
Active Revision - answer questions, use memory joggers - words, rhymes, tapes, flash cards for key points and legal cases, mind maps to link things together
Above all practise under exam conditions ! Revision
9. Monitor your revision, make a timetable by topic and syllabus and keep to it
Use CBT or On-Line help if available
Remember, you need somewhere quiet, free of distractions and equipped with storage space Revision
10. Think POSITIVELY
Be CONFIDENT
Remember that you are going to get a DISTINCTION ! Attitude
11. Certificate, Diploma or ACII, theyre all different its a game of time versus marks
If youve 3 hours or 180 minutes to gain 200 marks, thats just 4 minutes for each 5 marks (after checking etc)
CII Pass Mark normally 110 marks (55%) Know Your Examinations
12. Diploma Compulsory (PO1 or 2, PO3, PO4)
20 short answer questions in 3 hours or 8 minutes a question (with checking time)
10 marks per question
Diploma Branch (P10, P11, P12, P13, P16)
14 short answer plus 2 essay questions
10 marks each - allow max 2 hours for short questions (about 8 minutes per question)
30 marks for each essay 1 hour for essays Know Your Examinations - Diploma
13. ACII Compulsory (510, 520, 530)
Part One 8 short or 5 minutes per question (CII own suggestion max 45 minutes)
6 marks for each short question (48 marks)
Part Two 4 essays (510 has compulsory question no differential in marks)
38 marks each essay (152 marks)
Approximately 30 minutes per essay Know Your Examinations - ACII
14. ACII Specialist, Technical, Management
Part One 8 short or 5 minutes per question (CII own suggestion max 45 minutes)
6 marks for each short question (48 marks)
Some have compulsory question (50 marks)
If compulsory question included, then 3 more essays at 34 marks for each essay (102 marks)
If no compulsory questions, then 4 essays at 38 marks each (152 marks)
Still approximately 30 minutes per essay Know Your Examinations - ACII
15. NO marks for questions that you do not attempt - never leave anything blank - intelligent guess is better than nothing
You are not going to get more than marks allocated to the question - if question asks for three examples, you will get no extra marks for mentioning a fourth
Rare to get 100% of allocated marks - especially with essay questions but you are extremely likely to get some marks for at least attempting a question
16. Examiners never assume knowledge
Students who know subject often get low marks - this is quite common
For some people, most difficult paper is one where they have specialist knowledge
Perhaps they have worked in or studied subject before
Please remember to tell examiner all facts - especially ones that are so obvious that they seem not worth mentioning
17. Do you know where Exam Centre is ?
Do a trial run
Can you park there if you need to ?
Have carbohydrate and protein-rich breakfast or lunch to raise your energy
Get there in plenty of time
Remember to take necessary identification
Pens, pencils, calculators, erasers etc
Water or juice (if allowed)
18. Be organised - as you sit waiting for paper, remind yourself that you know the exam, you know whats required and that examiners want you to pass
Deal with any distractions before you start (wobbly table - too hot - too noisy)
Listen carefully to envigilators instructions
Use a watch/clock/stopwatch Examination Itself
19. Read WHOLE PAPER FIRST !!!
Note what questions are compulsory and how marks are awarded
Follow exam paper instructions precisely and manage your time
Then decide in what order to do questions Examination Itself
20. Pace yourself - dont spend all your energy on first few questions
Allow time for checking
READ and UNDERSTAND each question THOROUGHLY
Look for KEY words or INSTRUCTIONS
Check and recheck your time allocation Examination Itself
21. Plan your answers - write down lists of dates, cases etc - use bullet points for short answers and for planning essay answers
Jot down headings, sort into logical sequence and CHECK ALL points have been covered - lets call them your TRIGGERS Examination Itself
22.
Inside front cover of answer paper, brainstorm questions by writing down these triggers you will use when answering in full
If you run out of time, there is now some form of answer already there
If necessary, refer examiner to those notes Examination Itself
23.
CONSIDER whole questions
CONSTRUCT your answer relating to key words and your knowledge
UNDERLINE key words
LINK your points to key words in question
PRIORITISE the points listed General Rules
24. Short Answer Questions - use bullet points or note form (CII own suggestion)
Essay Questions - use bullet points to plan your answer
KEEP REFERRING BACK TO QUESTION
Write down first bullet point and then refer back to question cover your next bullet point and so on
CHECK ALL your points have been covered
Develop your essay from there Specific Rules
25. If youve a choice of two questions and its difficult to decide between them, jot down headings for both and see which one can be developed better to obtain more marks
Make sure you answer question the examiner actually set, not question you wanted him/her to set Other Vital Points
26. STATE
Write down clearly
OUTLINE
Identify main features or general ideas on topic
DESCRIBE
Give a fuller account of something What the Examiner Means !!!
27. EXPLAIN
Give clear and detailed account to show you understand philosophy of subject
ADVISE
Look at circumstances, identify possible alternatives and provide reasoned solutions
LIST
Provide a series of bullet points What the Examiner Means !!!
28. Structure your answer try not waffle, repeat or pad - examiners get bored easily and theyre not silly
Include an introduction defining terms and stating how you will approach question - then do main points
Remember key examiners terms
Remember to use paragraphs (examiners get lost in long single blocks of writing like some of our slides sorry) Answering Style & Structure
29. Presentation - you will not fail because you do not write or spell well or that your grammar and punctuation are not perfect
You will get better marks if your script is easy to read and understand
If question involves figurework, its about insurance principles not mathematics - if answer is not working out very well, its likely youve made a mistake Answering Style & Structure
30. CII examiners use a follow-through system - if result is wrong but logic is right, you will still get bulk of marks
If you run short of time, try to answer in note or bullet-point form (or refer to folder cover)
Even let examiner know that you are running out of time Answering Style & Structure
31. Marking schedule is prepared at same time as exam paper
May be amended if examiner sees fit
Marking schedule is designed to reward correct but does not penalise incorrect
Papers will normally be marked within a month of exam
Marks are moderated for fairness Marking Your Paper
32. Failure to answer the question set
Inadequate understanding of main principles
Failure to answer enough questions
Waffling, repetition (including question itself)
Failure to structure an answer properly
No paragraphs, headings or underlinings
Setting out both sides of a discussion or illogical and confused presentation
Poor standard of English
Poor (illegible) handwriting
33. UNDERLINE key words
LIST relevant points
LINK your points to key words
PRIORITISE points listed
CONSIDER whole question
CONSTRUCT your answer relating to key words and your knowledge
34. Because they are unprepared
Because they have not structured their study and revision correctly
But mostly, because they use the wrong techniques !
35. Be POSITIVE
Be ORGANISED
Use your MEMORY SKILLS
Use the RIGHT TECHNIQUES
Use BULLET POINTS if you run out of time - better to say something rather than nothing
Be PREPARED, do not rely on luck Remember !!!!!!
36. When exam is over, try not to discuss it with anyone else only the examiners personal opinion matters
One last task - when you have put books away, reflect on what went right, what went wrong and what you can learn from this and give any useful revision resources to help your colleagues
Most of all, do your best and GOOD LUCK !!
Remember the Golden Rules