In order of your comments:
Do take the normal breaks - you want the practice test to be just like the real test. On the real test, you'll have one 8-min break after IR and another after quant. In practice, the break feels more like 5-6 minutes because it takes a couple of minutes to check in and out of the room.
i think you mention that the first few questions are actually harder, the latter questions are easier in the article
Nope - I don't mention that anywhere because it's not true. :) The idea that the earlier questions are worth more is a myth - don't believe it! Read the Scoring section of our free e-book The GMAT Uncovered Guide (it's already in your Student Center - everyone who has an account with us has access to it).
I'm going to say that you need to read that even more now that I've read your next comment - the first thing you told me was the # of questions you got wrong overall... but that data point doesn't mean much. :) Go learn about the scoring.
The big message is that you have significant timing problems; you need to start addressing that right away.
Read these two short "mindset" articles first:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... to-win-it/http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... -to-do-it/Then dive into this long article on time management and start doing what it says:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... nt-part-1/Here's a resource on translation in general:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... into-Math/Here are some resources on how to read RC:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... p-passage/http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... -passages/http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... -passages/I just submitted another RC article that should go live on our blog next week - just keep checking our blog till you see it.
will take another full length test in ten days or so
Probably not what you want to do. You've just taken two - you should now have a very good idea of your strengths and weaknesses. Take the time to make some significant progress before you bother to spend 3.5 hours taking another test - it's mostly just going to tell you what you already know, because 10 days isn't a huge amount of time.
In general, take a test, analyze it, then spend *weeks* dealing with the issues that arose during that test. Only when you feel you've made significant progress and tackled all or most of the major issues should you then go take another test and repeat the cycle. Practice CATs are really good for (a) figuring out where you're scoring right now, (b) practicing stamina, and (c) analyzing your strengths and weaknesses. The actual act of just taking the exam is NOT so useful for improving.
Re: your question [C] no, it won't harm directly, but it won't really help so much either. And it will harm in the sense that you'll be wasting a lot of time doing something that doesn't really help that much.
Read the "how to study" section of this article:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... -the-gmat/That's how you should be studying. :) Look through and let me know if you have any questions about it.