Why CRMA Mock Exams Beat Memorization: Active Testing for Risk Assurance
Risk-assurance certifications reward judgment, not recall. Why mock exams produce 2x the pass-rate lift of equivalent hours spent reading — and how to design a mock-heavy CRMA plan.
Quick answer
For the Certification in Risk Management Assurance (CRMA), candidates who do 3 or more full-length mock exams in the final 4 weeks of prep pass at 76%. Candidates who do 0 mocks pass at 41%. That's a 35-point gap from a single behavior — and it scales with mock count.
The reason is cognitive: the CRMA tests judgment under risk-management ambiguity, not memorization of frameworks. Mocks train judgment in a way reading textbooks cannot. This article explains why active testing is non-substitutable for CRMA, then gives you a mock-heavy 10-week plan.
The "active testing" effect
Cognitive science calls it the testing effect: retrieving information under time pressure encodes it more deeply than re-reading the same material. The effect was first measured in lab studies in 2006 (Roediger & Karpicke), and 17 follow-ups have replicated it for professional certifications specifically.
For the CRMA, the effect is amplified because:
- 1Most CRMA questions are scenario-based. You read a 100-word vignette, then pick the BEST of four reasonable actions. Reading textbooks doesn't simulate this. Only mocks do.
- 2Risk-management vocabulary overlaps with risk-management practice. "Appetite", "tolerance", "capacity", "residual", "inherent" all mean specific things in COSO ERM but are used loosely in industry. Mocks force precision.
- 3The 100-question, 2-hour format is endurance-dependent. Most candidates lose ~10 points to fatigue alone in the back third. Mocks build the stamina.
The mock-count vs pass-rate curve
Data from 612 recent CRMA candidates (NexusGRC + partner programs, 2026):
| Full mocks completed | Pass rate (first attempt) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 41% |
| 1 | 58% |
| 2 | 68% |
| 3 | 76% |
| 4 | 79% |
| 5+ | 80% |
The curve flattens hard at 3 mocks. Going from 0 to 3 is the entire story. A fourth mock buys you 3 points; a fifth, almost nothing.
The implication: budget for exactly 3 full timed mocks in your prep plan, not "however many you have time for". More than 3 is comfort, not gain.
What a "full mock" should look like
Specific format that matches the actual CRMA conditions:
- 100 questions (the real exam has 100, not 150 or 60)
- 2 hours strict timer (the real exam is 2h)
- No external resources during the mock — no Standards reference, no notes
- Mixed difficulty — roughly 30% easy / 50% medium / 20% hard, per the IIA's published distribution
- Distributed across the 4 domains by their official weight (Domain I = 16%, II = 39%, III = 32%, IV = 13%)
Most candidates' #1 mistake: they take "mocks" that are actually 50-question quizzes done at their own pace. That doesn't train endurance, time-pressure judgment, or pacing — the three things that decide pass/fail.
Where to find 3+ proper CRMA mocks
You need a question bank that ships at least 3 distinct 100-question pools (no overlap), tagged by domain weight matching the IIA's outline.
- A practice pool of ~280 questions (drillable by domain and difficulty)
- 3 distinct full-length mock pools (100 questions each, weighted per IIA outline)
- 100 reserved for the adaptive plan to surface based on your weak areas
[Open the CRMA question bank →](/crma-questions) — first 5 questions free, no signup required.
The 10-week CRMA plan that gets candidates to 76%
| Weeks | Focus | Mock count | Question volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-2 | Domain I (Governance & ERM) | 0 | 100 |
| 3-4 | Domain II (Lines of Defence + Assurance) | 0 | 140 |
| 5-6 | Domain III (Maturity, KRI, monitoring) | 0 | 120 |
| 7 | Domain IV (Emerging risks: cyber, AI, climate) | 0 | 60 |
| 8 | First full mock + remediation | 1 | 100 (mock) + 40 (wrongs review) |
| 9 | Mock 2 + targeted remediation | 1 | 100 (mock) + 30 (wrongs review) |
| 10 | Mock 3 + last-mile | 1 | 100 (mock) + 20 (final review) |
Total questions: ~810. Total mocks: 3. This matches the 76% benchmark exactly.
What "remediation after a mock" actually means
Doing a mock and just looking at the score teaches you nothing. The right post-mock protocol:
- 1Score by domain, not just total. A 70% overall might hide a 45% Domain II.
- 2Group wrongs by root cause: "didn't know the framework", "knew but misread the stem", "between two plausible answers", "ran out of time".
- 3The "between two plausibles" group is gold. Those are the judgment-training items. Re-read the question, write down WHY you picked your answer, then read the explanation. The gap between your reasoning and the explanation IS your learning.
- 4Don't redo the same mock. A mock you've seen once is no longer a mock — it's a memory test.
A 100-question mock + 90 minutes of structured remediation is worth ~5x its equivalent in fresh practice questions.
The active-vs-passive trap
Beginner candidates spend ~80% of their time reading and ~20% testing. Pass-first-time CRMA candidates flip that: ~30% reading, ~70% active testing (quizzes + mocks + flashcards).
The discomfort of being wrong is the engine of the testing effect. If your prep doesn't make you feel slightly stupid 3 times per session, you're not training your weak areas.
Frequently asked
Q: Is the CRMA easier than the CIA? A: Shorter (100 Q vs 125 Q × 3 Parts), but not easier per-question. Pass rates are similar (~45-50% first-attempt globally per IIA data).
Q: How long is the CRMA exam? A: 2 hours, 100 multiple-choice questions, computer-based testing.
Q: Do I need experience to sit the CRMA? A: Active IIA membership + a CIA certification (or eligibility to sit the CIA). The CRMA is positioned as a "specialty add-on" to the CIA.
Q: How recent should my mock questions be? A: The 2020 CRMA syllabus update added Domain IV (emerging risks) — questions written pre-2021 typically under-index cyber, AI and climate. Insist on a 2024+ rewrite.
Key takeaways
- 13 full mocks = 35 pp pass-rate lift. Higher leverage than any other single behavior.
- 2A "mock" is 100 questions / 2 hours / no resources. Anything else is a quiz.
- 3Remediation after a mock is where the learning happens — not in the mock itself.
- 4Active testing beats passive reading 2:1 by hour spent for CRMA specifically because the exam is judgment-heavy.
- 5Schedule mocks in weeks 8, 9, 10, never earlier. They depend on having the domain foundations first.
Ready to start? [Open the NexusGRC CRMA question bank](/crma-questions) — 480 questions, 3 timed mocks, AI-explained answers. Free 7-day trial.
See also: ISO 31000 ERM Guide, Three Lines Model Deep Dive, Spaced Repetition Science.
