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Buy Clep(r) Introductory Psychology Book + Online by Sharpsteen PH D, Don J online on desertcart.ae at best prices. ✓ Fast and free shipping ✓ free returns ✓ cash on delivery available on eligible purchase. Review: I meant to return this item back through UPS/FedEx but I ended up keeping the book and paying for it. Besides I fail the exam/test for the psychology test for a college admission department; the college told me that I could retake this exam in 6 to 9 months. So I decided that I was not going to pursue this anymore and so I stop dreaming about becoming a LPC/Therapist in the Clinical Mental Health Counseling field because I put in the hard work but these online colleges does not want to give me my degree so I can practice and be licensed as a LPC. So this book had good knowledge but I failed and now I am working through my trauma issues. Review: This is the only source of study material I had for the Intro. Psychology CLEP exam. I received the book the day before I was scheduled to take the exam, and didn't get to spend more than 10 hours studying it. However those 10 hours were very intense. There are two practice exams in the text, and you get access to the same ones online (plus a pre-study exam to see what your background knowledge is before you start with the text). I'll explain how I studied for the CLEP with this book. Let me also say I am a Human Physiology TA, so I knew all the physiology info and know how to study effectively, but the rest was all new information to me. What worked for me may not work for you: I first took the pre-study exam (the pre-study exam is only 50 questions, I made a 31/50 = 62%, and believe I only did that well due to already knowing the physiology info). I then read through the explanations to each question in that exam, which briefly explains what each one of the multiple choice items is. It was a lot of new information I had no background with, so I made a lot of notes while doing so. I probably spent 2 hours doing this. I then read the text in about 3-4 hours and took a lot of abbreviated notes along the way. After reading the text, I re-read all of the notes I had made then took the first practice test. Again I read through the explanations for each question and got to know all the multiple choice items, not just the correct ones. The next day, I studied all my notes, and took the last practice exam. I again read the invaluable explanations to each question, then off I went to take the CLEP exam. So test score correlation: Pre-Study Practice Exam: 31/50 = 62% Practice Exam 1: 65/95 = 68% Practice Exam 2: 74/95 = 78% CLEP Score (is 95 questions, but they convert your score out of 80): 72/80 = 90% For my school, to pass you have to make a 50/80 = 62.5%. There were probably only 5 or so questions that I felt were recycled from the practice exams which was kind of disheartening during the CLEP, as each question was completely new to me. There was probably 20% on the CLEP that was new material that was not covered by this text or its practice exams. Again disheartening, and I did not feel good during the CLEP, but made a good score in the end. With the new material and questions on the CLEP, I just used process of elimination and picked out the incorrect options (since I had memorized a lot of the vocab/terms) which made the test more manageable. Again, what worked for me may not for you. Good luck, you can do this!




| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (312) |
| Dimensions | 16.76 x 1.78 x 24.89 cm |
| Edition | 2nd Second Edition, Revised ed. |
| Grade level | 8 - 9 |
| ISBN-10 | 0738610178 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0738610177 |
| Item weight | 299 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 228 pages |
| Publication date | 16 February 2012 |
| Publisher | Research & Education Association |
| Reading age | 16 years and up |
T**N
I meant to return this item back through UPS/FedEx but I ended up keeping the book and paying for it. Besides I fail the exam/test for the psychology test for a college admission department; the college told me that I could retake this exam in 6 to 9 months. So I decided that I was not going to pursue this anymore and so I stop dreaming about becoming a LPC/Therapist in the Clinical Mental Health Counseling field because I put in the hard work but these online colleges does not want to give me my degree so I can practice and be licensed as a LPC. So this book had good knowledge but I failed and now I am working through my trauma issues.
B**D
This is the only source of study material I had for the Intro. Psychology CLEP exam. I received the book the day before I was scheduled to take the exam, and didn't get to spend more than 10 hours studying it. However those 10 hours were very intense. There are two practice exams in the text, and you get access to the same ones online (plus a pre-study exam to see what your background knowledge is before you start with the text). I'll explain how I studied for the CLEP with this book. Let me also say I am a Human Physiology TA, so I knew all the physiology info and know how to study effectively, but the rest was all new information to me. What worked for me may not work for you: I first took the pre-study exam (the pre-study exam is only 50 questions, I made a 31/50 = 62%, and believe I only did that well due to already knowing the physiology info). I then read through the explanations to each question in that exam, which briefly explains what each one of the multiple choice items is. It was a lot of new information I had no background with, so I made a lot of notes while doing so. I probably spent 2 hours doing this. I then read the text in about 3-4 hours and took a lot of abbreviated notes along the way. After reading the text, I re-read all of the notes I had made then took the first practice test. Again I read through the explanations for each question and got to know all the multiple choice items, not just the correct ones. The next day, I studied all my notes, and took the last practice exam. I again read the invaluable explanations to each question, then off I went to take the CLEP exam. So test score correlation: Pre-Study Practice Exam: 31/50 = 62% Practice Exam 1: 65/95 = 68% Practice Exam 2: 74/95 = 78% CLEP Score (is 95 questions, but they convert your score out of 80): 72/80 = 90% For my school, to pass you have to make a 50/80 = 62.5%. There were probably only 5 or so questions that I felt were recycled from the practice exams which was kind of disheartening during the CLEP, as each question was completely new to me. There was probably 20% on the CLEP that was new material that was not covered by this text or its practice exams. Again disheartening, and I did not feel good during the CLEP, but made a good score in the end. With the new material and questions on the CLEP, I just used process of elimination and picked out the incorrect options (since I had memorized a lot of the vocab/terms) which made the test more manageable. Again, what worked for me may not for you. Good luck, you can do this!
T**E
This book was extremely helpful for studying for the CLEP Psychology exam. Clear explanations, great practice questions, and the online resources made it even better. Highly recommend!
B**E
I answered all 95 questions on the actual exam in 28 minutes.... and scored a 58 (50 is passing). That's almost 4 questions per minute. I only used the REA materials. My method: 1. Take the diagnostic test 2. Read the book cover to cover once and highlight throughout 3. Write a personal study guide and improve it with the detailed answer key to the practice exams 3. Take practice exam 1&2 OPEN BOOK until I could pass with 100% and a full understanding of the explanation for every question. This means I understood every right answer AND every wrong answer, which multiplies the utility of the practice exam 5x The actual exam is easier than the practice tests although there were about 20 questions that I had to answer purely through process of elimination because I had not seen the name/idea before. I probably missed many of those. There were 5 or so questions that were verbatim from the practice exams. I hope this helps you!
A**R
This book has enough information for you to pass the exam. I passed just above the passing scaled score of 50 with only three nights of studying. I looked at other websites for free practice test and I noticed that a lot of the terminologies that were on the exam were similar to the terminologies used by the author. There were some questions that I don't remember seeing in the book like decibels and other psychologists ( I can't remember exactly--Bandura, Milgram, etc). But overall, if you are looking for a quick and easy to understand study guide, this is the one for you.
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