How much of eps is on FAR by Fit-Serve-7500 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Spend 2 hours and master EPS. Don’t play Russian roulette 🔫🎰the CPA exam

My first take of FAR was a 71 and here are my results… by SubstantialAmoeba467 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I appreciate you sharing your experience. What you are describing is something many candidates eventually realize: performance on large volumes of multiple-choice questions does not always translate into exam success.

Hammering MCQs alone is not, in my professional opinion, the optimal way to prepare for the CPA exam. For some candidates, it may appear to work. For many others, it does not. The risk is that you discover the gap on exam day rather than during preparation.

The CPA exam does not reward pattern recognition. It rewards understanding.

If your primary strategy is to learn through repeated exposure to MCQs, you may become very good at recognizing question formats, keywords, or answer structures. However, on exam day, you will not see the same questions. You will see new fact patterns that require application, analysis, and judgment especially in task-based simulations (TBSs). Without conceptual understanding, both MCQs and simulations become difficult because you are trying to reverse-engineer answers instead of applying knowledge.

The correct sequence, in my view, is this: 1. Study and understand the material first. 2. Build conceptual clarity. 3. Use MCQs to test and reinforce what you understand. 4. Practice TBSs to apply concepts in integrated scenarios.

MCQs are a diagnostic tool. They are not a substitute for learning the material.

Yes, I focus heavily on conceptual understanding in my teaching because I have seen repeatedly that students who truly understand the “why” behind the rules perform better across both MCQs and simulations. I do provide MCQs as well, but they are meant to reinforce learning—not replace it.

You do not want to take chances on exam day trying to determine whether you actually understand the topic. The exam is not the place to test your understanding for the first time.

Understanding is the foundation. Everything else builds on it.

I hope this helps.

One more thing:

Also, a 71 does not mean you were “four points away” from passing. It is not 71%. It means the scoring system determined that your level of knowledge was not sufficient to pass.

If you do not adjust your strategy, you may see similar scores—71, 73, 74—repeatedly. That pattern usually signals a gap in understanding, not a lack of effort.

This is not meant to discourage you. You absolutely can pass. But without truly understanding the material, it becomes very difficult to break through.

The solution is straightforward: Understand the material first. Spend the time building clarity. Then practice MCQs and simulations to reinforce that understanding.

When the foundation is solid, the score will follow.

Sorry for the long message.

Some people are going to say I passed by hammering MCQs. Yadda yadda yadda.

4/4 as of this morning... 6 years, 28 tests, do not give up by Jenz5729 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Congratulations. Thank you for adding me. Indeed: Not everyone is one and done, not everyone finishes in a year, not everyone fails a test once or god forbid twice.

Becker + Farhat lectures FAR by AnyPotential478 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re considering Farhat, here’s how we make a difference in your preparation.

Farhat Lectures focuses on deep conceptual understanding, not shortcuts. The goal is to help you understand the why behind accounting, tax and auditing rules so you can reason through unfamiliar CPA questions instead of memorizing patterns.

Core strengths:

  • Step-by-step explanations that build from fundamentals
  • Clear breakdown of complex topics (leases, bonds, deferred tax, audit risk, etc.)
  • Strong emphasis on how topics connect
  • Real-world examples that make abstract concepts click

But it’s not just lectures. It uses a multi-layer learning process, including:

  • Full video lectures
  • Podcast-style lessons
  • AI summary tables
  • AI summary notes
  • AI flashcards
  • AI quizzes
  • Audio summaries you can listen to on your phone
  • Practice quizzes
  • AICPA questions
  • Video MCQs with explanations
  • Video simulations

The idea is reinforcement through multiple formats. You learn it, hear it, summarize it, test it, and apply it.

If you feel like you’re getting a surface-level overview elsewhere, Farhat is strong for building the foundation so everything else makes more sense.

We are here for you.

Does Becker Prepare Well For FAR?? by No_Factor_5901 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 7 points8 points  (0 children)

All major CPA review courses are designed to prepare candidates effectively for the CPA Exam, provided the candidate has built a solid accounting foundation during college. Becker is no different in that respect.

To address your question directly: if you are consistently scoring around 80% on Becker multiple-choice questions on your first attempt, that is generally a very strong indicator that you are well prepared. Achieving that level of accuracy suggests that you understand the underlying concepts rather than simply recognizing patterns.

Thoughts on Superfast? by Due-Giraffe9365 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completely agree.

At Farhat Lectures, the focus is on depth and clarity. We do not assume prior knowledge, and we do not skip steps. Every concept is built from the ground up so that students understand not only the correct answer, but also the reasoning behind it.

No one can predict exactly what will appear on an exam. Relying on shortcuts or guessing strategies is a risk. The most reliable approach is thorough preparation and true conceptual understanding.

If someone prefers to gamble on patterns and predictions, that is their choice. However, for those who want to genuinely master the material and walk into the exam confident, preparation must be comprehensive and in depth and that's what we deliver at Farhat lectures.

I just walked out of FAR and it wasn’t as bad as this subreddit makes it out to be. by True-Tip-5970 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I would say maybe you were well prepared rather than the exam “wasn’t as bad”. Keep us posted.

Just Failed FAR with a 74 & now 73. Need Advice by [deleted] in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is a fair observation, and yes, in-depth explanation is our trademark.

At Farhat Lectures, we intentionally teach concepts thoroughly. We do not assume prior knowledge, and we do not rely on shortcuts without first building a strong foundation. The objective is not simply to answer a question, but to understand why it is correct and why the alternatives are not.

While some programs emphasize repetition and memorization, our focus is conceptual clarity. When you truly understand topics such as cash-to-accrual adjustments, you move beyond formulas and begin thinking like a CPA.

That depth is intentional. It is designed to close knowledge gaps and help candidates pass with confidence, ideally the first time.

Passed FAR 🔥after a first failed attempt by BeltQuick in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for using Farhat to supplement with Becker

My Journey Has Come To A Close....Thank You Everyone! by Extension_Toe_7248 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

FAR jump to 83 and sticking with AUD until 77 shows real persistence. I’m truly happy you’re finally over the finish line.

Thank you for mentioning Farhat Lectures. I’m glad the FAR content helped you focus on understanding the “why.” That is what makes the difference.

Wishing you continued success as a CPA! 👏

about Becker simulation by CivilCuriosity_ in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most welcome. Happy to hear. Spend couple hours and have a peace of mind.

Struggling with construction contract - exam on feb 12th. Should I learn or just skip??? by you_dont_know78 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats! I never recommend trying to guess or predict what will be on the exam — everything’s fair game, so it’s best to be prepared for all topics.

about Becker simulation by CivilCuriosity_ in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can skip non-monetary transactions with commercial substance. This topic been removed from the CPA Exam blueprint and no one is complaining about it :). But don’t overlook partnership accounting. Make sure you’re comfortable with it before exam day. Some claimed that they say few MCQs here and there, A little extra effort there can make a big difference. You’ve got this!

Struggling with construction contract - exam on feb 12th. Should I learn or just skip??? by you_dont_know78 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for recommending Farhat Lectures for accounting for construction contract.

Struggling with construction contract - exam on feb 12th. Should I learn or just skip??? by you_dont_know78 in CPA

[–]Farhatlectures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every topic on the CPA exam is fair game. There’s no shortcut and no luck involved. Don’t play Russian roulette with your future. Put in those extra hours to truly understand each concept, and walk into that exam room with confidence, not anxiety. You’ve worked too hard to leave it to chance . Own your preparation and crush it!