>>13741461Honestly I don't regret studying that way at all because I'd rather just focus on the exam autistically for a month and then get it over with than torture myself with it for half a year 1hr per day.
You should try and understand the basic concepts in each section because then you can kind of guess your way through the multiple choice. E.g., if you know how TVM works then you can kind of infer that a question asking you about returns over time will involve time discounting, and then maybe one of the answers involves no time discounting so you know that ones wrong, etc...
You should also do a shit load of practice questions, since that's how you learn what answers they expect. That's especially how you should approach ethics, where the primary goal is to conform to what they want of you rather than to operate on gut instinct.