by StaceyKoprince Fri Aug 29, 2008 5:01 pm
Hi, I'm sorry I'm just getting to this today! It's been crazy here this past month. Your most recent tests show some nice consistency in the high 600 / low 700 range, so that's good. In the last week, the goal isn't usually improvement so much as reinforcement - to make sure that you actually can and do perform at your level when you get in there for the real test.
I typically recommend taking a final practice test exactly one week from the official test day, and take it at the same time of day. (If you can't, take it as close as you can to 1 week before, but still at the same time of day - time of day is more important. (I know this won't help you now but it might help others reading this.)
Then spend that last week developing your "game plan" based on the results of that test. Know what your strengths and weaknesses are not only by question type (DS, PS, SC, CR, RC) but also by content area or question type (eg, geometry vs. algebra for quant, or infer vs. specific detail for RC). For your strengths, give yourself permission to spend some extra seconds when you get a hard question of that type. "Extra seconds" means 10, 20, 30 seconds, something like that - NOT minutes. For your weaknesses, give yourself permission to let go and move on when you get a hard one of that type. Learn how to make educated guesses for those (ie, learn how to identify and eliminate wrong answers for questions of that type). Practice your overall pacing. Review your major strategies for the different question types and content areas. Etc.
The day before, do some VERY high-level review of your major strategies and pacing - don't spend more than 2 hours studying. Get together everything you need for test day (including food and drink to bring with you!). Have a good dinner and go see a movie or do something to take your mind off of the test. Get a good night's sleep.
The day of, eat a meal with protein, complex carbs, and fat a couple of hours before the test starts. Get there early. Do some practice problems to warm up right before you go in - VERY easy problems in both math and verbal, only a few each, and don't check the answers (don't even bring them with you). This is the equivalent of jogging around the track before the big game to warm yourself up.
Good luck - let us know how it goes!
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep