Anyone else studying for COPR in the next month? Want to study together
Taking my COPR - Canadian Organization of Paramedic Regulators Examination exam in 7 weeks and trying to find people at a similar stage to keep each other accountable.
I study better when I have someone to compare notes with. Currently going through "copra sf" and working on my weak areas — specifically around copra sf.
My schedule: 90 min of focused study every weekday, full practice test on weekends. I review every wrong answer and try to understand the why, not just memorize the right option.
If you're in a similar prep window and want to:
- Compare practice test scores weekly
- Share resources that actually helped
- Talk through confusing questions
Reply here or message me. Doesn't have to be formal — even just checking in once a week helps me stay on track.
Where is everyone at in their prep?
Same boat a few months ago. Here's what I'd tell myself:
The COPR exam is more application-focused than the study guides suggest. They test whether you understand copra, not just whether you can define it.
My tip: when you see a scenario question, mentally walk through it step by step before looking at the answers. The wrong answers are designed to catch people who jump to conclusions.
Good luck — the fact that you're doing this level of prep means you're going to be fine.
This thread saved me from making the same mistakes. The tip about copra san francisco being weighted heavily is accurate — I adjusted my study time based on this and it made a real difference. Also seconding the recommendation for copr test.
Failed my first attempt, came back to this thread for motivation. The advice about really understanding why wrong answers are wrong — not just memorizing the right ones — is the single best piece of advice I've seen for the COPR. Rebuilding my prep around that principle now. Using copr test for the concept review.
Failed my first attempt by like three points and honestly it crushed me, but looking back I knew why. I'd basically just been reading through copra sf passively and convincing myself I understood stuff. Second time around I made myself answer questions out loud or write down the reasoning before I even looked at the options. Sounds small but it changed everything. The exam isn't really testing if you recognize the right answer, it's testing if you can think through a scenario when you're tired and second guessing yourself.
The other thing I changed was I stopped avoiding my weak areas. First attempt I kept drilling the stuff I was already good at because it felt productive and made me feel smart. Dumb, I know. So if you're seven weeks out, my honest advice is go straight at the topics that make you uncomfortable now while you still have time. And do timed sets, not untimed, because the clock messes with you more than you'd think. Happy to compare notes if you want, I'm retaking soon too.
Just hit 74% on my last practice set which honestly felt huge after bombing the first few I tried. I've been at it for about three weeks now and patient assessment scenarios are finally starting to click. Still shaky on some of the pharmacology stuff but it's getting there.
Planning to sit the real thing in about five weeks so our timelines are pretty close. Would be great to check in with someone going through the same stuff right now. What areas are you finding the toughest?
That's exactly how I've been approaching it too. For every wrong answer I get, I force myself to figure out *why* it was wrong, not just flag it and move on. It takes longer but the patterns start clicking after a while. I wasted my first two weeks just highlighting right answers and my practice scores barely moved.
One thing that actually helped me was drilling the eligibility and regulatory side early because those questions kept tripping me up. I found some free copr eligibility requirements practice questions that broke down the reasoning behind each answer, which was way more useful than just memorizing. If you want to compare weak areas sometime I'm down, accountability actually makes a difference when the exam is this close.
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