by StaceyKoprince Mon Jul 27, 2020 6:01 pm
Yes, the analysis takes a long time—typically several hours for each section (for Quant and Verbal).
You mention being stuck on steps 4 and 5, which are the steps where you really have to put together all of the individual data points into a bigger picture prioritization / plan. Can you give me more detail about what you are finding difficult or where you are feeling stuck?
In step 4A, you're looking generally at the easier half of the questions you were able to earn in that section. This could be problems that are rated at a lower level of difficulty or, if most of your problems were at the same level, the ones that you felt were easier (and so you would probably have labeled them legitimately correct or careless mistakes—things you knew how to do, even if you made a mistake and got them wrong).
The idea here is to see whether there are any holes in foundation or timing issues that are hurting you on these lower-level problems. Chances are that you will find it easier to address these issues because the problems are easier (compared to the others), so this begins to help you see what to prioritize for these question types / areas.
In step 4B, you're specifically looking at an overall analysis of your time management and timing decisions throughout the section. Were you generally on time throughout? Did you find yourself significantly ahead or behind at various points? If so, why—where did you choose to spend extra time or to rush? This allows you to uncover the timing decisions that you're making as you move through the test—and that allows you to realize where you made decisions that you're happy with and, conversely, where you made decisions that don't look like great decisions now. Once you know that, you can start to figure out how to make better decisions next time.
For example, if you realize that, by Question 9, you were 4 minutes behind, you might look and see that you spent 3.5m on Question 5. If you got it wrong, the remedy would be to bail fast on something like that in future, so then the question becomes, "How will I know next time that I should guess quickly and move on? What are the specific characteristics that signal that this question is terrible for me?"
Alternatively, if you got it right, first check that you legitimately got it right and didn't just get lucky (since it is a multiple choice test). If you did legitimately get it right, the next question is whether you can find a way to streamline the process so that, next time, you can get a similar problem right in, say, 2.5 minutes rather than 3.5 minutes. That sort of thing. The analysis tells you what you need to try to learn from that problem.
The Question-by-Question pacing sub-segment in step 4B might be too detailed for your needs; it really depends on what your data is like. But if you are finding this sub-segment not to be useful, feel free to skip it.
Finally, in step 5, you're summarizing everything you've just figured out about in all of the previous steps and you're boiling things down to one of three buckets:
(1) I'm generally good at this.
(2) I want to prioritize this stuff between now and my next practice test (because these are my best opportunities to improve).
(3) I'm weak at these things and the opportunities to improve aren't that great, at least right now.
List things at the content-area level for quant (linear equations vs. inequalities vs. fractions vs. etc) and SC (modifiers, parallelism, etc). For CR and RC, use question type (inference, strengthen, weaken, main idea, etc.).
Also include major strategies (eg, estimation, working backwards, testing cases).
Generally speaking, people put too much in bucket 2 and not enough in bucket 3. You want bucket 2 and bucket 3 to have roughly the same number of items. (When you put something in bucket 3, you're not saying that you'll *never* study it. You're only saying that you're deprioritizing it between now and your next practice test, that's all.)
Then, when you have your buckets, you set up your study plan from now until your next practice test, prioritizing the items that you've listed in bucket 2. Hopefully, when you take that next test, a number of bucket-2 items will move up to bucket 1, and then you can take some things that are currently in bucket 3 and move them up to bucket 2.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep