by StaceyKoprince Mon Apr 28, 2008 10:10 pm
Unfortunately, you're not studying in the right way. Don't worry - you're in good company; most people don't know the right way to study.
You don't actually get much better by simply doing problems. You get better by analyzing problems and figuring out how to make connections with past and future problems.
People who score well on the test do so because they recognize what to do with a problem, not because they can somehow figure everything out from scratch in 2 minutes. If you want to score well, you should be able to have a problem pop up on the screen and, within 30 seconds, be able to categorize it by question type and sub-type, content area and sub-area, and techniques applicable to those categories. You should also be able to recognize that you have done something like it before and remember what technique(s) you used. Finally, you should have already though about how to decide which technique would be best for this particular question based on those connections you are making to past problems - so that you can make that decision very quickly. 750-level testers can do this with probably 80% of the questions they see. 700-level testers can do this with probably 50% of the questions they see. 650-level testers can do this with probably 30-35% of the questions they see.
Note: when I say "recognize," I do not mean that you are seeing a problem you've actually seen before. I mean that you have seen a problem similar to that one and you actually remember and recognize what to do as a result.
Okay, so how do we do all of that?
Ask yourself these questions:
1) Did I COMPREHEND the symbols, text, questions, statements, and answer choices?
2) Did I understand the CONTENT being tested?
3) Was I able to CATEGORIZE this question by topic and subtopic?
4) Did I make a CONNECTION to previous experience?
5) Did I choose the best APPROACH? If there are multiple approaches, how do I DECIDE which one is best?
6) Did I have the SKILLS to follow through?
7) Am I comfortable with OTHER STRATEGIES that would have worked, at least partially?
8) Do I understand every TRAP & TRICK that the writer built into the question, including wrong answers?
9) Have I MASTERED this problem well enough that I could explain it to someone else?
10) How will I RECOGNIZE different problems in future that test the same or similar things?
You need to answer these questions for every single problem you do - not just the ones you get wrong. I can easily spend 5 to 15 minutes analyzing a problem after the initial 2 minutes in which I do it, and 90% of my learning comes from that analysis, not from the initial 2 minutes.
Good luck!
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep