Wednesday, October 16, 2013

How to Study for a Personal Trainer Exam

So I passed. I can now call myself an ACE-Certified Personal Trainer. Man, it feels good—TO NOT BE STUDYING. Geeze. Six months, people. That's how long it took me. But you know what, I think it was the perfect amount of time. Because, and I'm just being honest here, there's a lot to learn. Case and point:

I think that stack of cards is bigger than the first stack I had when I studied for my NATE exam back in 2011. Needless to say, I will not be sad to see them go. I won't be sad to see any of my study materials go...well, okay. I'm keeping the official ACE books. But everything else is already in the recycling bin, gone and totally forgotten. I hope I don't ever have to study for something that big again. (Well, at least not for a very long time. Never say never, right?)

Now comes the fun part. The continuing education part. I have two years to rack up the right amount of points. One year to rack up the right amount of points for my Spinning certification. There will undoubtedly be some overlapping going on. Double count it!

Anyway.

If you're studying for an ACE exam, or if you're thinking about studying for an ACE exam...or any personal training exam, then you might find the following tips useful.

1) GIVE YOURSELF PLENTY OF TIME TO STUDY. 
I'm not sure how other programs do it, but the ACE program comes with a 12-week study guide. Follow it, and you'll be ready to take your exam in 12 weeks...at least that's the idea. I tried to keep up, but it stressed me out, so I decided to work at my own pace. Use what they send you, but do not feel pressured to keep up. We all learn differently, right?

2) THE BOOKS ARE FILLED WITH MORE THAN YOU NEED TO KNOW FOR THE EXAM.
I'm not telling you to skim the books for the important parts, you definitely need to read everything. But remember: These books are yours to keep forever and so they're meant to be a resource you can continually go to for information as you need it. Don't freak out if you can't remember what the origins and insertions are for every muscle, but know what origins and insertions mean in the grand scheme of things. While there are recall questions on the exam, a bulk of the questions are based on application. So, always ask yourself this: How would I use this information in a real-life situation? And make sure you can answer yourself.

3) TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ANY RESOURCE THAT TESTS YOUR KNOWLEDGE. 
Specific to the ACE program, Master the Manual provides an outline and actual test (with answers) for each chapter in the ACE Personal Trainer Manual.

It's a great way to make sure that you are absorbing everything you are reading. Catch: You have to pay extra for it. But it's totally worth it. It really helped me figure out what I needed to spend more time on. Note: If you're not studying the ACE program, do some investigating to see what you can find specific to your program. At the very least, take a practice test if you can (ACE offers this).

4) MAKE NOTE CARDS FOR THE TOPICS YOU NEED THE MOST HELP WITH.
As evidenced above, I made way too many note cards. Like, one for each concept and then some. Towards the end, I didn't even reference them because the stack overwhelmed me. But, when I got to a point where I really needed to buckle down on some things, I was able to pull out the cards I needed. So make note cards, but don't feel like you need to make a note card for everything.

5) GIVE YOURSELF A WEEK OR TWO OF RELAXED STUDY TIME BEFORE YOUR EXAM.
I took a practice test two weeks before the real thing. I failed the first one, spent a week casually going over the concepts that threw me, then I retook it and passed. And after I passed that second practice test, I took a week to casually flip through everything I had been looking at, including the book. I didn't cram, I didn't spend hours memorizing. I just let everything sink in. It was nice.

6) ARRIVE TO YOUR EXAM ON TIME (BUT NOT TOO EARLY). 
Get there ready to go. Don't get there with an hour of time to cram. You'll just freak yourself out. Wake up, have a good breakfast, put on a good outfit or whatever...and just go and get it over with.

8) BELIEVE IN YOURSELF.
There will probably be questions on the test that make you go "uhhh, what the..." and you should just roll with them. Answer the best way you see fit and move on. Trust in everything you taught yourself. If you're taking the ACE exam, it lets you flag questions for later review. I found this to be super reassuring. I ended up flagging about 24 questions, and I think I switched about two or three answers in the end. It was a nice option to have. (If you can't flag on your exam, but if you can go back and forth between questions, then write down the questions you want to review. Self-flag, if you will.)

Each and every one of us takes tests differently. I, for one, suck at standardized, multiple-choice questions. But I passed. And you will, too. Just stay calm throughout the exam and do yo thang.

And then heave a big sigh of relief when it's all over.

But wait—What if you DO fail? Don't sweat it. Go home, write down some of the things that threw you off, then take a day off. Come back, do some reviewing and check the exam schedule. There were undoubtedly questions you did answer correctly, which represent concepts you do know well. So get back in the saddle as quickly as you can. Take that test again before you start forgetting things! You WILL pass it. I promise.

Question: Are you a certified personal trainer or group fitness instructor? What do you recall about taking your test? Any advice to add?

12 comments:

Kayla Kleinman said...

Congratulations! I remember the sigh of relief when I took my NASM exam and passed.

Mandy Nester said...

Kudos to you! I'm working on my continuing ed a little at a time. It's expensive! There's a workshop in December that I plan to attend that will give me almost half the credits I need. Yippee! I'm happy for you.

adailydoseoffit said...

CEUs are totally expensive, but...at least they can be super fun to rack up! have fun at your workshop!

adailydoseoffit said...

Thank you! HUGE sigh of relief...

Alex said...

Hey! Do you have the math equasions?

adailydoseoffit said...

What math equations are you looking for?

Eliseo said...

Hey Tara do you know what I should specifically buy to pass the test. I was looking on amazon because its cheaper but theirs so many materials to get but what do I really need to buy to study and pass?

adailydoseoffit said...

You really, truly need to purchase one of the bundles listed on the ACE site.

Samantha Harnack said...

Great advice! Thank you!

Raleigh said...

Hi! You have some great advice, i was wondering, did you take thorough notes or did you find them unhelpful? I'm halfway through my ACE studying adventures and i've been taking thorough notes the whole time but it's getting tedious and I'm starting to think it's a total waste of time! What did you do?

adailydoseoffit said...

As I read through each chapter, I'd make notecards for all of the key points (definitions I needed to study, lists that were important, muscle groups, etc.) And then I'd reference the "master the manual" book, making notecards for each of the key points they recommend knowing (if I hadn't already made a notecard for it). I did not outline each chapter, if that makes sense. Using the questions in the "master the manual" book, and the questions at the end of each chapter in the anatomy book really helped me prepare for the exam.



The more you study, you'll start to notice the same concepts popping up in different chapters throughout, so that's another reason why I didn't spend much time outlining entire chapters at once. But definitely do what you need to do to remember key points.

Raleigh said...

Thank you!!!

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