by StaceyKoprince Thu Nov 16, 2023 8:21 pm
Welcome to the forums!
Ok, so Q42 and V35, but you normally score Q45 on practice tests. And have you been taking your practice tests under 100% official conditions? Time limits, breaks, no eating and drinking during the test, etc? (Just making sure the Q45 score is valid—if we take longer breaks or give ourselves other advantages, that can artificially inflate a practice test score.)
Do you have any ideas about why your Q score dropped a bit during the real test? Did anything feel different at all? Tell us anything you can think of, even if you're not sure that it made a difference to your performance.
Did you take the test in a testing center? If so, you can order something called an Enhanced Score Report for USD30—it gives additional data about your test performance that might help you to figure out why your Q score dropped. (You don't have to order it, but if you're not sure why your score dropped, that might help. Also, this report is not available if you took the test online.)
If you can hit Q45 next time (and keep V at 35), that would take you to about 650-660, but still not to the 680-700 that is your goal. Given that you don't have very much time, you need to try to lift both Q and V. You'd need to pick up a few more points in each section (something like Q47-48 and V37-39) in order to get into the 680-700 range.
Have you used our CAT Analysis Tracker (linked in all of our online syllabi) to analyze your most recent MPrep practice tests? If not, that's the next step. We need to figure out what the best opportunities are to lift you a few more points in each section. These are the things to look out for as you analyze:
1. Improving your timing decisions. This usually involves cutting yourself off faster on problems that are taking too much time/mental energy and redistributing that time to other problems that are more likely to pay off.
2. Addressing careless mistakes. These are things that you already know how to do, but you're missing points due to some bad habits. Identify the bad habit, and then figure out the new habit to build that will address that entire class of careless mistakes. (eg, Make a mistake because you didn't write your work down? Train yourself to write everything down in future. Fall into a trap because you relied on memory and didn't go back to the passage or argument to verify a detail? Train yourself to go back and check the details, every time. And so on.)
3. Addressing "right but too slow" problems. You know how to do them, but the way that you're doing them right now is taking too much time and using up too much mental energy. Find a better / easier / more efficient way to get to the answer. On quant, a lot of the time the answer is to estimate (or estimate more aggressively). It's not a math test; nobody's ever going to check your work. It doesn't matter that you can calculate the specific number that's sitting in answer (B). All that matters is that you know it can't be ACDE, because none of them are close enough. On verbal, a lot of the time this means: Stop agonizing back and forth over the last two answers. Compare them against each other once; then make your best choice and move on.
4. Addressing "wrong but I get it now" problems. These are the ones that you legitimately got wrong, but afterwards when you review, you immediately see how to do it or the explanation makes complete sense to you, etc. These are more effort than 1 through 3, so definitely prioritize 1 through 3, but also address as many of these as you can in the time you have left.
Do *NOT* prioritize "wrong and I don't get it" or "wrong and this problem is driving me crazy" problems. Those problems will be addressed in item #1 above: Making better timing decisions. Specifically, these problems go in the "get wrong as fast as I can" bucket. Spend your time and mental energy someplace better!
If, after you analyze your most recent practice test, you want to share your analysis with us, please do so! Just summarize the data for us and then tell us your takeaways / conclusions. We'll tell you whether we agree with your analysis and let you know any other ideas we have about what to do. Good luck!
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep