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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Series 63 exam takers: BUY THIS BOOK!!!,
By
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the Nasaa Series 63 Exam (First Books Training Library) (Paperback)
If you are preparing to take the NASD Series 63 exam, BUY THIS BOOK!!! I cannot state that strongly enough. I faild my first attempt at the 63 because my test prep materials were abismal. For my second attempt, I bought every book and CD available (practially), but ended up using "Pass the 63" almost exclusively. Not only did I pass the second time around, I improved my score by leaps and bounds. This book is THE only book you need, period. Everythings else out there (to date) is junk in comparison. Do not waste your money on other books like I did. Buy this book, actually read it, do the exercises, and follow the plan, and you will pass the test. It is a very difficult test with very poorly written questions, and even more poorly written answers (done purposefully, by the way). This book will help you cut through the jargon and purposefully vague language of the test.
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read This Before Purchasing Walker's Book - You will thank me!!!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the NASAA Series 63 Exam (Paperback)
I hold a number of licenses in the Securities industry, and I am a general partner in a prominent firm. It came to my attention that someone in my firm inadvertently allowed my Series 63 to lapse which I held for several decades. I have no time to waste, so my first project is simply what is the best way to study for this exam? I passed it, and please allow me to give you the benefit of my experience. 1) This exam is not a blow through. You cannot wing it. The knowledge is very specific, and dogmatic. It is not intuitive, and perhaps even illogical. Since it involves rules, regulations, and laws, the exam is written by lawyers who want to impress you with how smart they are? 2) The exam in no way says anything about you in terms of your intelligence. You study you pass. You don't study, you fail. 3) Do not use just one source of materials for studying, including this very well written book. The first thing you should do is read the entire book through from beginning to end, and try to form a template in your mind of the outline of the material. You will not master it on the first read. There are four main sections to the exam, and they are given different weightings. Since the time Walker's book was written, the WEIGHTINGS HAVE CHANGED. This is CRUCIAL information. In my opinion, the exam is much, much easier now. In fact I over studied because when I read this book first, I put too much energy into areas that I subsequently found out were now underweighted. Here are the old, and new weightings. Avoid reading this chart at your peril: Topic Area Tested----------No. of Questions-----Percentage of Exam Registration of Persons -----18 questions--------30% of old exam Securities-------------------15 questions--------25% of old exam Business Practices-----------21 questions--------35% of old exam Administrative Provisions----6 questions--------10% of old exam REVISED Exam Topic Area Tested--------------No. of Questions---------Percentage of Exam Registration of Persons-------18 questions now 24------------40% Securities--------------------15 questions now 6-------------10% Business Practices------------21 questions now 24------------40% Administrative Provisions-----6 questions still-------------10% You should memorize the above chart. Notice that Registration of Persons is now 40% of the exam, up from 30%. Securities are now 10% of the exam, down from 25%, and Business Practices is now 40%, up from 35%. Folks, the Securities part of the exam is the toughest part of the exam by far, and they have now made it just 10% of the exam. In Walker's book, there is just too much material devoted to the securities part of the exam, and it is very detailed and difficult, but it is now only 10% of the exam. What this means is that you will be killing yourself to memorize the Securities section, and it represents only 10% of the exam. If you study it, you will get half of the questions right in any event, so now you are only giving up 5 points, or half of the ten points allotted for the securities section. Before the exam was revised, and securities represented 25% of the exam, you were at risk of failing because of this part by itself. Somebody smartened up and realized that there was no need to continue to test extensively on Securities because anybody doing underwritings would be using lawyers to do the deals anyway. You also need a 72% passing grade to get through this exam, and that is up from 70%. The exam is 65 questions of which 60 count towards your score. On every exam there are 5 questions (you won't know which ones) where the examiners are trying out new questions, and areas to determine if they should be included in future exams. This means you can get all 5 of these questions wrong and it means nothing for your score. Here's the problem though. Most people taking the exam are going to become flustered or shaken when they start seeing questions that they have not studied for. Don't let these questions rattle you. Just be aware before you even sit for the exam, that there are going to be five questions that you have most likely NEVER SEEN before, and you have no idea at all of the answer. Just forget about them. I have a few other ideas for you: A) In Walker's book are two exams to study with answers. This is not enough. You need to study and take 7 or 8 practice exams, and you should take them over and over again, until you are getting in the high 80's on each and every exam. If you do that, you will get in the high 80's on the actual exam. Since a score of 72 is passing on the actual exam, you want to make sure; you score well above that on the practice exam. You won't see this in any of the books, but if you happen to fail this exam, you must wait 30 days to take it again. Fail it a second time and you must wait 6 months to take it again. This is your career; you can't afford to fail this exam. B) The exam is very TRICKY. They put in a word or a phrase, or a negative, in order to fool you. They actually attempt to fool or trick you. This is why you must not leap to the answer when you take the exam. You must read the question thoroughly and actually say to yourself, are they trying to fool me? Read each and every answer. Do not bring preconceived notions to this exam. Have a very open mind. It is very, very easy to make careless answers on this exam. It is terrible to know an answer and still get it wrong, because of either trickiness, or just not reading the question or associated answers correctly. C) Bear in mind that this is a multiple choice exam, and that means that they are giving you the answer in one of those choices. There are also questions, where the answer is several of the choices, like I plus II, plus IV. Just have an open mind, and focus on what they are asking. Remember, do not formulate an answer too quickly, and do not make careless errors. D) I suggest you order exam questions and answers from some other service of which there are several out there. Just check the search engines, and you will find what you are looking for. You may also want to order flash cards, they really do help. Some services also have video or DVD's available to help you, and I found them useful as well. In summary, adopting the right approach to studying for the Series 63 will slash your study time in half. Knowing what questions are on the exam, and to what extent each of the study sections are tested will force you to reallocate your time to study what is important. Finally, anything you find really difficult, write up on index cards, or type it into a word document, and print it with the smallest font, and carry it around with you and study it in elevators, on trains, or in transit anywhere. You want to get this exam out of the way, and get on with your career. Benefit from the mistakes of others, and those that have taken this exam before you. Good luck. Richard Stoyeck
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Book,
By
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the Nasaa Series 63 Exam (First Books Training Library) (Paperback)
The Series 63 is a notoriously difficult test. So you need this book. When you look at it closely, you will see that it has many perspectives that turn a complex subject into manageable areas of study. While at times Mr. Walker's writing style makes the reading light, and even fun, it is a serious and accurate tool. Use all of it. First, read it to learn the material as you would a text book written in English. When you have mastered this, return to the sections that describe the vocabulary and language that is actually used in the law itself, and be sure you understand how to translate what you have learned back into the oddities of "legal language" (i.e. go back to the hard parts). Remember, Mr. Walker writes nice; the test designers don't. Use all the exercises, translate the words and don't overuse the tests provided. Early on, they will help you know where you stand; later they continue to reinforce your studies. Read the explanations for the answers you got right as well as the ones you got wrong because they all provide more insight. The book also directs you to sites with additional information, tests and simulations. Follow these links. Use it fully, and you will pass the test. I did.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
If you like plain English...,
By blackcatmama (Guyton, GA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the Nasaa Series 63 Exam (First Books Training Library) (Paperback)
This book breaks down the law into everyday terms for all of us who aren't up in our legal terminology. The practice exams included are accurate representations of the actual test questions, the rationales are easy to understand. It helped me pass the 63 the first time!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
End of Chapter ?'s Will Help You Pass Your Test,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the NASAA Series 63 Exam (Paperback)
Fortunately, I passed my Series 63 test on my last try, which could have resulted in a job loss for me. Besides using the Kaplan Series 63 test, drill practice exercises and audio disk, I used Robert Walker's Pass the 63 test. The questions are actually harder in his book and more comparable to the actual NASD test than the actual Kaplan book. I didn't read everything in the book because it was wordy. However, the questions did help me a great deal as an additional study aid. Who knows maybe if I didn't buy the book and studied the questions, I might have failed the test. The book guarantees you to pass and I did.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
VERY GOOD TEST MATERIAL,
By
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the Nasaa Series 63 Exam (First Books Training Library) (Paperback)
MY SECOND TEST MATERIAL AND THE BEST. VERY SIMPLE AND TO THE POINT. EASY TO READ AND RETAIN. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND.
DAVID FRAZER
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book will make you pass,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the NASAA Series 63 Exam (Paperback)
You will not score 100 percent using this book, but if you are like me, that is not your goal. You want to pass this test as quickly and painlessly as possible and get on with your life. This book excels in this regard. Walker reduces the material to a child-like level of clarity. He takes a set of tedious test material and turns it into easy reading.
I used this book along with the STC Series 63 manual and scored 90 percent with a week of preparation (alongside my job). At most, the STC book contributed about 5 points to my score. Walker's book is not complete, but it has enough information for you to pass, provided that you have some measure of common sense to answer the more "colorful" questions. The four practice tests mirrored the difficulty of the actual exam. The best part is that it only takes 2-3 days to get through the whole book. Learn the material quickly. Pass the test. Get on with your life. That's what this book is for.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Guide for the Series 63,
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the NASAA Series 63 Exam (Paperback)
I used this book almost exclusively in my preparation for the series 63 exam and I easily passed after only 5 days of studying. This book, combined with some of the free guides you can easily find online are more than adequate. The book was always concise and informative, and was often times amusing. Trust me, this stuff isn't the most exciting material, and Robert's writing made it possible to make it through the book in an afternoon without being completely bored out of my mind. Also, the practice tests in the back are a great help and are absolutely necesarry to pass the real thing.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Decent overall value,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the NASAA Series 63 Exam (Paperback)
I "studied" for the 63 skimming through this guide exclusively and passed the first try. It does a good job explaining the core concepts you need for the exam, not necessarily all the specific details. His jokes help the content move along at first (they do get old fast), and his writing style isn't dry - always a plus.
If you do well with standardized exams and are logical, you can buy this guide, read through it, and pass the exam. If you'd rather be very thorough, spend $20 more and get the STC Interactive guide.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great addition to study materials,
By Karen "Karen" (Palm Desert, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the Nasaa Series 63 Exam (First Books Training Library) (Paperback)
This book was a great addition to the study materials given to me by my employer. The material was easy to understand, well laid out and not nearly as boring as every other Series 63 book I read.
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Pass the 63: A Training Guide for the NASAA Series 63 Exam by Robert Walker (Paperback - March 31, 2009)
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