A 67–77 range is close, and with a more targeted push, you can lock this in. You have a strong base, and your results show you’re not far off; you just need to tighten a few high-impact areas and shift how you’re using practice exams.
Where to focus (based on your exam summary):
Options (58%)
Retirement & education plans (60%)
Suitability (60%)
Alternative pooled investments (70%)
Municipal debt (70%)
Taxes (70%)
Test-taking and review tips:
Take exams without instant feedback. Using instant feedback on your practice exams is great for learning, but not great for measuring readiness. Start taking exams without instant feedback mode to mirror the real exam experience.
Try to do more review between practice exams. Instead of stacking exams back-to-back, do: exam → deep review → reread weak sections → retake quizzes → next exam. That’s where your score jump will come from.
Review every missed question in depth. Don’t just read the explanation; ensure you understand the concept underlying it. For example, if you consistently miss options question, go back to the options lesson and drill that exact concept until it clicks.
Re-read the sections you haven’t finished. You’re close to passing already, so completing the remaining readings (especially the red/yellow areas) could be the difference between “just passing” and “comfortable buffer.”
Keep taking full practice exams until you’re consistently scoring in the mid-to-upper 80s. That gives you a comfortable buffer for exam-day nerves or a tougher question set.
You got this! Tighten up those weak areas, and you’ll see your scores improve before test day.