How to Practice WC in BEC with Becker

  • Creator
    Topic
  • #2583939
    Puppykoala
    Participant

    Didn’t see any question or sections offering writing practice or training in Becker. Wondering how everyone else is tackling this part. I will need extended practice as English is not my first language. Any tips are appreciated!

    Shoot for the stars!

    FAR 88 04/19

    REG 95 07/19

    BEC 91 11/19

    AUD 88 12/19

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Author
    Replies
  • #2584008
    Recked
    Participant

    I have yet to find a review course that actually grades your WC. They all seem to just give you an example, and of course mine never looked like the example.
    Grammar, punctuation, proper context/body/format, and keywords. Those should all be your focus.
    State what the question is asking, throw down some paragraphs with keywords to answer the question. Restate the question with the findings you just provided.
    Check the examples on the AICPA sample exam as well. Brain dumping and then forming that into a coherent letter format is the key.

    Memento Mori - Kingston NY CPA & EA (SUNY Albany 2002)

    FAR-93 11/9/17 (10wks, 250 hrs, Roger 1800+ MCQs, Gleim TB 600+MCQs, SIMs)
    AUD-88 12/7/17 (3 wks, 85 hrs, Roger 1000 MCQs no SIMs hail mary)
    REG-96 1/18/18 (6 wks, 110 hrs, 1400 MCQs, no SIMs)
    BEC-91 2/16/18 (4wks, 90 hrs, 1240 MCQs)

    #2585982
    Puppykoala
    Participant

    Sounds good Recked. Appreciate your suggestion.

    Shoot for the stars!

    FAR 88 04/19

    REG 95 07/19

    BEC 91 11/19

    AUD 88 12/19

    #2587536
    Puppykoala
    Participant

    Also, do you know what would be an approperiate length for the writtig? Becker has really detailed and well written examples but they all seem too long for the real exam.

    Shoot for the stars!

    FAR 88 04/19

    REG 95 07/19

    BEC 91 11/19

    AUD 88 12/19

    #2589618
    Jimmy Dugan
    Participant

    I don't think the Becker examples are that long. You will always have something like like 5 paragraphs with 4 sentences each. Biggest help is having a plan; find out immediately what position you are taking on the matter and put that in the intro. Then support that position with 3-4 paragraphs of details on why you have taken that position. Then a conclusion paragraph on what you just said. Make sure you have some keywords that relate to the topic. It's that easy.

    People sweat the written questions, but they really are the easiest part of the exam. Recall your 5-paragraph essay skills from high school and you will be fine. What really kills people on the WC is not having enough time. You make more time by having a fast pace on MCQ's. Don't linger on anything too long and you should have plenty of time for the written portion.

    AUD - 95
    BEC - 87
    FAR - 84
    REG - 90
    You're killing me Smalls

     

    #2594538
    Mike J
    Participant

    Follow this basic 3-paragraph rubric. 1) This is what I'm going to tell you, 2) This is what Im telling you, 3) This is what I told you.

    The this is what the question tells you to write about.

    Doing this helps give you structure (maybe even trick the computer into giving you point or two) and the very act of writing something may also help jog your memory.

    AUD - 90
    BEC - 79
    FAR - 77
    REG - 77
    They don't trust JUST ANYBODY to count beans
Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.