Wiki CPCO Exam Question

coder21

Guru
Messages
171
Best answers
0
I bought the study guide and printed out the reference on the website. Did all chapter questions, practice test in book and practice test online. I felt pretty comfortable for the test. I failed it. What else can I do to help prepare for my retake.

I felt like the a lot of question where not what was in the study guide.

Thank you.
 
Did you take any references into the exam with you? Use the links provided for additional references and print those out. Organize into a binder and make additional notes in the margins.

I ear marked content using sticky notes. Made it easier to find during exam.

It is a hard exam and does contain items not in the 2017 program. Also there were errors in the program itself as well as the chapter tests. I brought Them to their attention, but I don't know if. Corrections were made.

I finished the course with 94. It took me 4.5hrs to take the exam and I barely passed. Yes, it's very indepth and intense.
 
I bought the study guide and printed out the reference on the website. Did all chapter questions, practice test in book and practice test online. I felt pretty comfortable for the test. I failed it. What else can I do to help prepare for my retake.

I felt like the a lot of question where not what was in the study guide.

Thank you.

There was a ton of information on the exam that was not in the course materials or the study guide. I took it twice. The first time I failed by 9 points. I think I could have been a lot more organized. I had printed all the additional information and links that they offered. My problem was not being able to located the information in a timely fashion. They skipped all around the material so I was constantly flipping pages. I thought it was going to be done in order like the CPC exam, boy was I wrong! The second time I was more organized and failed by 4 points. I think I changed some answers that I should have left alone! I retake it in 2 weeks. I hope that I am better prepared and this is my last time taking it.

Be as organized as possible and have your information marked.
 
Cpco

I felt like a lot of the items I study where not on the test at all. I had printed out items and binder.
 
CPCO Exam

Thanks for your information. Could you kindly send me a copy of your indexes/spines as volunteered? I am in the course of organizing the material for my exam this Saturday. i just took it and missed by one point!
 
I saw your post on how you prepared for the exam and wanted to know more on how you divided and tabbed the massive about information in order to access it during the CPCO exam. Thanks so much. S Johnson

I took the CPCO exam before there was a study guide and passed with an 86 on my first attempt. So, hopefully what I did will help some of you.

I literally printed about 4,000 (double-sided) pages. All of the information possible from the "additional information" part on AAPC's website: https://www.aapc.com/training/cpco-medical-compliance-resources.aspx. Anything and everything.

I then organized it into six, three-inch binders and tabbed every law / section. For the major laws, I wrote a summary page at the front of that section or found a summary page online and printed that. For example, this page was a quick resource that I still use to this day: https://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/provider-compliance-training/files/StarkandAKSChartHandout508.pdf. I still have the indexes for each binder (front of binder) and spine that lists what law was in which binder and the color tab it was assigned. I am happy to share these as well as how I broke down each binder if you want. Just PM me.

I highlighted key parts of each law as I hole punched them and organized them in the binder. You need to be familiar enough with each law to be able to find the information quickly. That is key. If you aren't familiar with the material, having it with you does not help you. It just becomes a mountain of paper. Effective tabbing and key highlighting was crucial for me aside from test taking skill.

You are allowed highlighters when taking the test. I also bring yellow and red flags. I use a yellow flag on a question that I am spending too much time on, but I know I can get the answer if I have a few more minutes. I use a red flag on ones that I haven't a clue on or I know will take me a lot of time/research. If time permits, I go back and work the yellow flagged questions first, then the red ones. If I am going to have to guess at an answer because I am running out of time, I want it to be on questions I probably would have had to guess on anyways.

Hope this helps and feel free to PM me with any questions.

Best of Luck,

Jennifer M. Connell, CPC, CPCO, CPC-P, CPB, CPMA, CPPM, CPC-I, CENTC
 
Cpco

I purchased the CPCO exam, study guide, and practice test in June of 2016, AAPC sent me a 2015 study guide. I didn't question the study year since AAPC is typically on point, I unfortunately "assumed" AAPC
sent the 2015 study guide due to no changes. Well took the exam twice and failed with scores in the 60's. I then purchades another test and study guide in 2017 (special sale) and was sent a 2017 study guide. Wow, what a difference! The 2017 study guide is much thicker with lots more information. The practice test is the same from both 2016 and 2017. I again took the test last weekend and missed by 2 points, 68%. There were a couple questions on the exam where I feel none of the multiple choice answers were appropriate, of course I selected one to not leave it blank. So, with all that said I'm not sure if I maybe answered questions incorrectly on the 2016 tests because I was sent a 2015 study guide and if the exam I took on March 25 went thru the audits like the CPC tests go thru. I'm both frustrated and disappointed in myself for not passing in addition to being frustrated and disappointed with AAPC for sending me a 2015 study guide for a 2016 exam. Again, I didn't want to question AAPC's integrity.

I bought the study guide and printed out the reference on the website. Did all chapter questions, practice test in book and practice test online. I felt pretty comfortable for the test. I failed it. What else can I do to help prepare for my retake.

I felt like the a lot of question where not what was in the study guide.

Thank you.
 
Last edited:
Same problem

I purchased the CPCO exam, study guide, and practice test in June of 2016, AAPC sent me a 2015 study guide. I didn't question the study year since AAPC is typically on point, I unfortunately "assumed" AAPC
sent the 2015 study guide due to no changes. Well took the exam twice and failed with scores in the 60's. I then purchades another test and study guide in 2017 (special sale) and was sent a 2017 study guide. Wow, what a difference! The 2017 study guide is much thicker with lots more information. The practice test is the same from both 2016 and 2017. I again took the test last weekend and missed by 2 points, 68%. There were a couple questions on the exam where I feel none of the multiple choice answers were appropriate, of course I selected one to not leave it blank. So, with all that said I'm not sure if I maybe answered questions incorrectly on the 2016 tests because I was sent a 2015 study guide and if the exam I took on March 25 went thru the audits like the CPC tests go thru. I'm both frustrated and disappointed in myself for not passing in addition to being frustrated and disappointed with AAPC for sending me a 2015 study guide for a 2016 exam. Again, I didn't want to question AAPC's integrity.

Hello Deirdre, You are not alone with this issue, I had the same problems. I was also given the 2015 study guide and took the coarse in 2016, and failed the test in 2017 (by 8 points). I called the AAPC to find out why there was so much on the test that was missing from the provided study guide and the course in general. The rep stated that there are some known issues with this course and they are in the process of overhauling the entire CPCO course. He said it was expected to be completed in June. Of course even he realized that this was useless information to people like us. His advise to me was: to keep going over the course materials, review the study guide and view the updates by using the online practice test (he stated this was based on the 2017 test) and reviewing the Federal Register for 2016 and 2017.

I am retaking my test on April 8th (6 days from now).

Good luck to you and me both.
 
CPCO Brilliant References Prep

I took the CPCO exam before there was a study guide and passed with an 86 on my first attempt. So, hopefully what I did will help some of you.

I literally printed about 4,000 (double-sided) pages. All of the information possible from the "additional information" part on AAPC's website: https://www.aapc.com/training/cpco-medical-compliance-resources.aspx. Anything and everything.

I then organized it into six, three-inch binders and tabbed every law / section. For the major laws, I wrote a summary page at the front of that section or found a summary page online and printed that. For example, this page was a quick resource that I still use to this day: https://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/provider-compliance-training/files/StarkandAKSChartHandout508.pdf. I still have the indexes for each binder (front of binder) and spine that lists what law was in which binder and the color tab it was assigned. I am happy to share these as well as how I broke down each binder if you want. Just PM me.

I highlighted key parts of each law as I hole punched them and organized them in the binder. You need to be familiar enough with each law to be able to find the information quickly. That is key. If you aren't familiar with the material, having it with you does not help you. It just becomes a mountain of paper. Effective tabbing and key highlighting was crucial for me aside from test taking skill.

You are allowed highlighters when taking the test. I also bring yellow and red flags. I use a yellow flag on a question that I am spending too much time on, but I know I can get the answer if I have a few more minutes. I use a red flag on ones that I haven't a clue on or I know will take me a lot of time/research. If time permits, I go back and work the yellow flagged questions first, then the red ones. If I am going to have to guess at an answer because I am running out of time, I want it to be on questions I probably would have had to guess on anyways.

Hope this helps and feel free to PM me with any questions.

Best of Luck,

Jennifer M. Connell, CPC, CPCO, CPC-P, CPB, CPMA, CPPM, CPC-I, CENTC

Hi JenniferB7, it sounds like you had the most brilliant references binders prepared for this exam! I too, am focusing on strategy in my preparations. I am taking the exam next Saturday, 4/22/17. I would really appreciate the opportunity to review your indexes. If it's not too much trouble, would you mind sharing?

Update: I passed, thank you so much JenniferB7!!!
 
Last edited:
Jennifer I sent you my email. Test is this Saturday!!

:confused:
I took the CPCO exam before there was a study guide and passed with an 86 on my first attempt. So, hopefully what I did will help some of you.

I literally printed about 4,000 (double-sided) pages. All of the information possible from the "additional information" part on AAPC's website: https://www.aapc.com/training/cpco-medical-compliance-resources.aspx. Anything and everything.

I then organized it into six, three-inch binders and tabbed every law / section. For the major laws, I wrote a summary page at the front of that section or found a summary page online and printed that. For example, this page was a quick resource that I still use to this day: https://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/provider-compliance-training/files/StarkandAKSChartHandout508.pdf. I still have the indexes for each binder (front of binder) and spine that lists what law was in which binder and the color tab it was assigned. I am happy to share these as well as how I broke down each binder if you want. Just PM me.

I highlighted key parts of each law as I hole punched them and organized them in the binder. You need to be familiar enough with each law to be able to find the information quickly. That is key. If you aren't familiar with the material, having it with you does not help you. It just becomes a mountain of paper. Effective tabbing and key highlighting was crucial for me aside from test taking skill.

You are allowed highlighters when taking the test. I also bring yellow and red flags. I use a yellow flag on a question that I am spending too much time on, but I know I can get the answer if I have a few more minutes. I use a red flag on ones that I haven't a clue on or I know will take me a lot of time/research. If time permits, I go back and work the yellow flagged questions first, then the red ones. If I am going to have to guess at an answer because I am running out of time, I want it to be on questions I probably would have had to guess on anyways.

Hope this helps and feel free to PM me with any questions.

Best of Luck,

Jennifer M. Connell, CPC, CPCO, CPC-P, CPB, CPMA, CPPM, CPC-I, CENTC
 
Hello,
Can someone give me addition tips on the CPCO Exam. I am taking it on April 22.

Index, articles, etc.

1.) Print the pages from the published Federal Register that contain the OIG Compliance Program Guidances.
2.) Place these printouts in a binder
3.) Read each guideline
4.) Analyze each guideline - How are they different? What are their similarities?
5.) If called to teach these guidelines as a professor to college students, can you do so confidently. Can people look to you and consider you a knowledge expert when it comes to these guidelines?

Have fun.
 
Cpco

When u took three exam again, was it the same exam?



I bought the study guide and printed out the reference on the website. Did all chapter questions, practice test in book and practice test online. I felt pretty comfortable for the test. I failed it. What else can I do to help prepare for my retake.

I felt like the a lot of question where not what was in the study guide.

Thank you.
 
Same test?

Can anyone tell me if you get the same test twice or total different test?


I purchased the CPCO exam, study guide, and practice test in June of 2016, AAPC sent me a 2015 study guide. I didn't question the study year since AAPC is typically on point, I unfortunately "assumed" AAPC
sent the 2015 study guide due to no changes. Well took the exam twice and failed with scores in the 60's. I then purchades another test and study guide in 2017 (special sale) and was sent a 2017 study guide. Wow, what a difference! The 2017 study guide is much thicker with lots more information. The practice test is the same from both 2016 and 2017. I again took the test last weekend and missed by 2 points, 68%. There were a couple questions on the exam where I feel none of the multiple choice answers were appropriate, of course I selected one to not leave it blank. So, with all that said I'm not sure if I maybe answered questions incorrectly on the 2016 tests because I was sent a 2015 study guide and if the exam I took on March 25 went thru the audits like the CPC tests go thru. I'm both frustrated and disappointed in myself for not passing in addition to being frustrated and disappointed with AAPC for sending me a 2015 study guide for a 2016 exam. Again, I didn't want to question AAPC's integrity.
 
The test questions will be different. AAPC produces several different versions of every test. If you have 5 people taking the CPC exam, each person will have a different exam version with different questions. The same applies for the CPCO exam.

For what it is worth, I am creating a CPCO exam review and will let you know when it is available.
 
Thank you

Thank you

The test questions will be different. AAPC produces several different versions of every test. If you have 5 people taking the CPC exam, each person will have a different exam version with different questions. The same applies for the CPCO exam.

For what it is worth, I am creating a CPCO exam review and will let you know when it is available.
 
Tears

Hello Deirdre, You are not alone with this issue, I had the same problems. I was also given the 2015 study guide and took the coarse in 2016, and failed the test in 2017 (by 8 points). I called the AAPC to find out why there was so much on the test that was missing from the provided study guide and the course in general. The rep stated that there are some known issues with this course and they are in the process of overhauling the entire CPCO course. He said it was expected to be completed in June. Of course even he realized that this was useless information to people like us. His advise to me was: to keep going over the course materials, review the study guide and view the updates by using the online practice test (he stated this was based on the 2017 test) and reviewing the Federal Register for 2016 and 2017.

I am retaking my test on April 8th (6 days from now).

Good luck to you and me both.

I have tears in my eyes as I'm reading this I have the study guide from 2015 and I failed it with a very low score. I'm so upset.
 
CPCO material

Hi Jennifer .. I am planning to take test end of june. Can you email me the litrature for CPCO?

I took the CPCO exam before there was a study guide and passed with an 86 on my first attempt. So, hopefully what I did will help some of you.

I literally printed about 4,000 (double-sided) pages. All of the information possible from the "additional information" part on AAPC's website: https://www.aapc.com/training/cpco-medical-compliance-resources.aspx. Anything and everything.

I then organized it into six, three-inch binders and tabbed every law / section. For the major laws, I wrote a summary page at the front of that section or found a summary page online and printed that. For example, this page was a quick resource that I still use to this day: https://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/provider-compliance-training/files/StarkandAKSChartHandout508.pdf. I still have the indexes for each binder (front of binder) and spine that lists what law was in which binder and the color tab it was assigned. I am happy to share these as well as how I broke down each binder if you want. Just PM me.

I highlighted key parts of each law as I hole punched them and organized them in the binder. You need to be familiar enough with each law to be able to find the information quickly. That is key. If you aren't familiar with the material, having it with you does not help you. It just becomes a mountain of paper. Effective tabbing and key highlighting was crucial for me aside from test taking skill.

You are allowed highlighters when taking the test. I also bring yellow and red flags. I use a yellow flag on a question that I am spending too much time on, but I know I can get the answer if I have a few more minutes. I use a red flag on ones that I haven't a clue on or I know will take me a lot of time/research. If time permits, I go back and work the yellow flagged questions first, then the red ones. If I am going to have to guess at an answer because I am running out of time, I want it to be on questions I probably would have had to guess on anyways.

Hope this helps and feel free to PM me with any questions.

Best of Luck,

Jennifer M. Connell, CPC, CPCO, CPC-P, CPB, CPMA, CPPM, CPC-I, CENTC
 
My proctor told me I could not sit for the exam.

I tried to take my exam today and the proctor told me I could not bring my material from the course. Not the study guide. She told me that I could take the test without any material or not take the test and tell AAPC I refused to take the exam. I am so upset. I left the exam without taking it. The proctor was new a proctoring CPCO exam, she stated she did not know what type of material should be brought, but the print out from the course look fishy to her. She said the printed paperwork should not have anything that has AAPC labeled on it. She also told me that I could not have labels. I studied for so long not to take the exam.




I took the CPCO exam before there was a study guide and passed with an 86 on my first attempt. So, hopefully what I did will help some of you.

I literally printed about 4,000 (double-sided) pages. All of the information possible from the "additional information" part on AAPC's website: https://www.aapc.com/training/cpco-medical-compliance-resources.aspx. Anything and everything.

I then organized it into six, three-inch binders and tabbed every law / section. For the major laws, I wrote a summary page at the front of that section or found a summary page online and printed that. For example, this page was a quick resource that I still use to this day: https://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/provider-compliance-training/files/StarkandAKSChartHandout508.pdf. I still have the indexes for each binder (front of binder) and spine that lists what law was in which binder and the color tab it was assigned. I am happy to share these as well as how I broke down each binder if you want. Just PM me.

I highlighted key parts of each law as I hole punched them and organized them in the binder. You need to be familiar enough with each law to be able to find the information quickly. That is key. If you aren't familiar with the material, having it with you does not help you. It just becomes a mountain of paper. Effective tabbing and key highlighting was crucial for me aside from test taking skill.

You are allowed highlighters when taking the test. I also bring yellow and red flags. I use a yellow flag on a question that I am spending too much time on, but I know I can get the answer if I have a few more minutes. I use a red flag on ones that I haven't a clue on or I know will take me a lot of time/research. If time permits, I go back and work the yellow flagged questions first, then the red ones. If I am going to have to guess at an answer because I am running out of time, I want it to be on questions I probably would have had to guess on anyways.

Hope this helps and feel free to PM me with any questions.

Best of Luck,

Jennifer M. Connell, CPC, CPCO, CPC-P, CPB, CPMA, CPPM, CPC-I, CENTC
 
I tried to take my exam today and the proctor told me I could not bring my material from the course. Not the study guide. She told me that I could take the test without any material or not take the test and tell AAPC I refused to take the exam. I am so upset. I left the exam without taking it. The proctor was new a proctoring CPCO exam, she stated she did not know what type of material should be brought, but the print out from the course look fishy to her. She said the printed paperwork should not have anything that has AAPC labeled on it. She also told me that I could not have labels. I studied for so long not to take the exam.

Anndrellebutler,

That is true. You cannot bring any material from the course. Please read page two of the this document. https://www.aapc.com/documents/exm-instructions.pdf
For the CPCO exam, you may bring: "Any published references are allowed, except Study Guides and published references by HCCA"
 
Sab001 is correct.

You are not allowed to bring the AAPC Study guides or any HCCA reference materials. However, everything else is allowed, such as printouts from the CMS or OIG websites, Federal Registers, etc. If none of your materials had "AAPC" or "HCCA" on them and everything you brought was printouts from the OIG, CMS, HHS, etc. websites, then I would definitely be on the phone Monday morning with AAPC. Those materials are allowed as are tabs, calculators, and highlighters. https://www.aapc.com/certification/faq.aspx I am not sure, specifically, what you brought to the exam, but if any of it was labeled with AAPC - including the study guide or course materials, then thn the proctor was correct in not allowing you to use them. Having said that, as someone who has proctored exams, if your proctor was in doubt as to what was allowed on the exam, he or she should have contacted AAPC. All proctors are given numbers to call should any questions arise on test day.

I will be having a live, online CPCO Exam review sometime in late June or early July. During the review, I will be going over key laws and tips for the exam and everyone will get updated articles to print (that can be used on the exam) along with printable tabs and other goodies. If you are interested, let me know and I will send you some information.
 
Last edited:
CPCO Exam Study Guide Information

Jennifer,

Hello,
I would be interested in participating in the review for the CPCO Certification that you plan on having in June or July,

Thanks,

Francine Williams
 
CPCO Online Review

Sab001 is correct.

You are not allowed to bring the AAPC Study guides or any HCCA reference materials. However, everything else is allowed, such as printouts from the CMS or OIG websites, Federal Registers, etc. If none of your materials had "AAPC" or "HCCA" on them and everything you brought was printouts from the OIG, CMS, HHS, etc. websites, then I would definitely be on the phone Monday morning with AAPC. Those materials are allowed as are tabs, calculators, and highlighters. https://www.aapc.com/certification/faq.aspx I am not sure, specifically, what you brought to the exam, but if any of it was labeled with AAPC - including the study guide or course materials, then thn the proctor was correct in not allowing you to use them. Having said that, as someone who has proctored exams, if your proctor was in doubt as to what was allowed on the exam, he or she should have contacted AAPC. All proctors are given numbers to call should any questions arise on test day.

I will be having a live, online CPCO Exam review sometime in late June or early July. During the review, I will be going over key laws and tips for the exam and everyone will get updated articles to print (that can be used on the exam) along with printable tabs and other goodies. If you are interested, let me know and I will send you some information.


Hello Jennifer,

I would be interested in taking the online review that you plan on having in June or July,

Thanks,

Francine Williams
 
CPCO Study Guide Issues

Hello Jennifer,

I would be interested in taking the online review that you plan on having in June or July, I am as frustrated as the rest of the group on taking the CPCO. I have a 2011 study guide, and when I call to get the latest guide, they have told me three time this is the latest guide, but according to the chats and forum its definitely not.....

Planning on taking in Aug. My email for tips and details regarding the online review : psmitchell06@outlook.com.


Thanks,

Pam Y.
 
Anndrellebutler,

That is true. You cannot bring any material from the course. Please read page two of the this document. https://www.aapc.com/documents/exm-instructions.pdf
For the CPCO exam, you may bring: "Any published references are allowed, except Study Guides and published references by HCCA"

That was surprising to me because the first time I took the test, I was able to.
 
CPCO Exam Review

Hello,

I am not sure how this happened as I am not the individual that will proctoring the review. I am getting emails asking to send and sign people up for the review.

JenniferB7 is the person to contact. Please read through the thread thoroughly.

Sorry for the confusion.

Thanks,

Francine Williams
 
If anyone wants to sign up to be notified when the review is available, please do so at this link:


You will simply get an email when the CPCO Review is available. Please feel free to share the link.
The review is almost done, but I am still waiting on some state approvals.
 
Francine,

I am waiting on some paperwork to clear with the state and AAPC. As soon as that clears, we will be good to go. I have every intention of having this ready by the end of the June; however, I don't control the state and they sometimes move slower than I would like. If you are scheduling your exam for the mid to end part of July, you should be good.
 
CPCO Study Guide

I bought the study guide and printed out the reference on the website. Did all chapter questions, practice test in book and practice test online. I felt pretty comfortable for the test. I failed it. What else can I do to help prepare for my retake.

I felt like the a lot of question where not what was in the study guide.

Thank you.

Hello,

I see several people have purchased current CPCO Study Guide. Unfortunately the study guide I received when I purchased the course was a 2011 with only a few pages. My question is this study guide really worth the money? I'm also seeing people talking about how most of the questions on the test were not within the course, maybe.

$90 is a lot when I thought it was supposed to be with the price of the course and was not. So should someone like myself really purchase the study guide.

Thanks,

Francine
 
CPCO Exam Guide

***Hi Jennifer -would you mind emailing me this guide as well?! I'd greatly appreciate it! This will be my first time taking the exam and I feel a bit overwhelmed with the amount of information there is to memorize.*** (jruiz410@msn.com) Thanks so much for the great advice!!
 
Course materials

Hello, this information is NOT true. I sat for the CPCO exam 3 times and each time i had the same materials. I passed it on my last try May 6th! It states on AAPC website that you CAN have these materials. Any published references are allowed, except Study Guides and any published references by HCCA. It did not say any study material from AAPC. I had a proctor that wasnt sure and she asked the other proctors, checked the reference sheet she had and made a phone call to verify. I also called AAPC before sitting for the exam my first time and was told that these materials are allowed. I also had tabs that were allowed. They do not allow sticky notes though. I am not sure what type of labels you had but the only thing they stressed was not having sticky notes or anything loose in your materials. I made a few binders and seperated them by chapters and had tabs for different subjects. I would suggest calling AAPC and reporting this!


I tried to take my exam today and the proctor told me I could not bring my material from the course. Not the study guide. She told me that I could take the test without any material or not take the test and tell AAPC I refused to take the exam. I am so upset. I left the exam without taking it. The proctor was new a proctoring CPCO exam, she stated she did not know what type of material should be brought, but the print out from the course look fishy to her. She said the printed paperwork should not have anything that has AAPC labeled on it. She also told me that I could not have labels. I studied for so long not to take the exam.
 
***Hi Jennifer -would you mind emailing me this guide as well?! I'd greatly appreciate it! This will be my first time taking the exam and I feel a bit overwhelmed with the amount of information there is to memorize.*** (jruiz410@msn.com) Thanks so much for the great advice!!


I don't have a guide. What I had were old articles from when I took the exam and some indexes (way too large for email). I am currently updating the articles and indexes and adding printable tabs as well as some other tips and will be offering this as part of a CPCO Exam Review. Every attendee will get articles (with an index for ease of use) that you CAN use on the exam along with printable tabs and instructions on how to organize your binders. No other CPCO Exam Review or Boot Camp currently offers this.

You may sign up to be notified of the upcoming review at the link below (registration email should go out today or tomorrow). You will simply get an email when the CPCO Review is available. Please feel free to share the link.

http://eepurl.com/cP7hc1

Hint: You really do not have to memorize everything. This test is more about application and how to use your resources than memorization. I show you how to do that.
 
Top