I work in veteran services at a state agency and I'm pursuing the CVA credential. I've been in this field for 3 years but most of my work has been navigating VA benefits claims, not the full advocacy scope the CVA covers. I'm not sure which areas of the exam are going to require the most catch-up for me.
From the study guide it looks like the exam covers benefits law, claims processes, appeals, healthcare navigation, and community resources. My weakest area is almost certainly the appeals process - I've done basic claims but rarely seen a full Board of Veterans' Appeals case through to resolution.
I'm planning 8 weeks at 1.5 hours a day. Has anyone gone through the exam recently and can say whether the practice materials from the certifying body are representative of the actual exam difficulty? I don't want to show up and find it's way harder than the prep materials suggested.
The exam format is multiple choice only - no scenario essays. Some questions were worded ambiguously but if you focus on what the regulations literally say rather than what makes practical sense you'll be fine.
I passed the CVA 4 months ago. The official practice materials are fairly representative - I'd say the real exam is maybe 10-15% harder on the appeals and BVA questions. Everything else was pretty close to what I prepared for.
8 weeks at 1.5 hours is about 84 hours total which should be plenty if you're already working in veteran services. I did 60 hours coming from a similar background and passed with a 79%. The BVA appeals content is worth reading carefully since it's rule-heavy.
The healthcare navigation section surprised me - there were more questions about non-VA community care coordination than I expected. Worth spending extra time on the MISSION Act provisions and eligibility criteria for community care.
I've been doing the same thing -- drilling questions and then forcing myself to figure out why the wrong answers are wrong, not just why the right one is right. It's slower but honestly it sticks so much better. I'm weak on the policy and regulations side too since most of my day-to-day is claims navigation, so I've been using the free cva veterans affairs policies regulations practice set to fill that gap. Some of those questions are tricky and the wrong answers aren't obviously wrong, which is exactly the kind of practice I needed.
Three years in veteran services definitely helps with the benefits stuff but the CVA scope is wider than I expected. Don't skip the ethics and advocacy framework sections even if they feel soft -- I got burned on a few of those early on because I assumed I already knew them.
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