Its good to know the important dates, or at least have a narrow range in mind so that you could pick up the right answer among other choices. Read the book 3-4 times, solve as many online/app tests as you can and you pass with no issues.i know we cant discuss specific questions...
Can you answer, however, are there a lot of questions that ask you to confirm the year events happened?
Very good advice there. Tho "date specific" questions are rare to few ~ such questions are set-up with three absolutely off drift answers. Only one (the correct one) will sound right if you have a broad idea of the subject.Its good to know the important dates, or at least have a narrow range in mind so that you could pick up the right answer among other choices. Read the book 3-4 times, solve as many online/app tests as you can and you pass with no issues.
Yes, agreed. You just need to know a "ballpark" range.Very good advice there. Tho "date specific" questions are rare to few ~ such questions are set-up with three absolutely off drift answers. Only one (the correct one) will sound right if you have a broad idea of the subject.
Simply put, if you study the Discover Canada booklet for "one week" before test ~ you'll get it. You'll get the right answer, even with dates.
If this is what you are trying to achieve, then anecdotal reports by some forum members are useless. They tell you nothing about the likelyhood of being asked particular kinds of questions. That's like asking someone "which table were you seated at in the restaurant last night". Two people will then tell you where they were seated. Is this of any use to you to determine at what table you will be seated? No.For those commenting to say it's good to know dates and to read the book 3-4 times, thanks. But this isn't what I'm asking and everyone learns in different ways. So while obviously the aim is to go into the exam knowing as much as possible from the Discover Canada book - I'm trying to determine for myself and others what the likelihood is of being asked a specific question which asks you to choose a date/year that the event occurred.
Here is the likelihood of question on dates -For those commenting to say it's good to know dates and to read the book 3-4 times, thanks. But this isn't what I'm asking and everyone learns in different ways. So while obviously the aim is to go into the exam knowing as much as possible from the Discover Canada book - I'm trying to determine for myself and others what the likelihood is of being asked a specific question which asks you to choose a date/year that the event occurred.
Respectfully, your input isn't helpful. I'm not trying to achieve a yes/no response. I'm trying to get information that will help people prepare. FYI I've studied the book fully 5 times and completed (and paid for test practice online)... I've now practised the questions 1000s of times.If this is what you are trying to achieve, then anecdotal reports by some forum members are useless. They tell you nothing about the likelyhood of being asked particular kinds of questions. That's like asking someone "which table were you seated at in the restaurant last night". Two people will then tell you where they were seated. Is this of any use to you to determine at what table you will be seated? No.
I feel misunderstood. I understand that for some the test format is easier, for some not. Of course some people are better at memorizing than others. But I wasn't referring to any of this.Respectfully, your input isn't helpful. I'm not trying to achieve a yes/no response. I'm trying to get information that will help people prepare. FYI I've studied the book fully 5 times and completed (and paid for test practice online)... I've now practised the questions 1000s of times.
But for some, "study the book" is easy while for others, it's not. Some people may take this to mean they need to memorise every date and name which can be incredible difficult, especially for those not use to french and/or English.
The above posts, excluding yours, will help others prepare and become confident in what they've learned.