- Fri May 31, 2013 11:43 am
#9579
I've just finished reviewing a practice test that I took yesterday. I think I remember hearing in class that if an answer choice that has the words cause or effect that it is almost always correct. I know that if there is more than one answer choice with cause that it won't be as easy to answer, but two questions that I missed on my practice exam would have been correct if I would have selected the (only) answer choice that had the word causal in it. So, what I'm asking is, is it a guarantee if you select the answer every time that has the word cause, effect or both every time that you see it, or does some thinking have to go along with it? I don't want to tell myself that all I have to do is look for those key words and think that I'm saving myself some time and end up getting a lot of questions wrong on the test.
By the way, the two questions that I'm talking about come from the December 2007 full length test. They are numbers 8 & 13 from section I.
Thank you,
Josh
By the way, the two questions that I'm talking about come from the December 2007 full length test. They are numbers 8 & 13 from section I.
Thank you,
Josh