by StaceyKoprince Fri Dec 12, 2008 12:08 am
I agree that you should keep doing some quant frequently to keep your skills up, and also that you should focus most on the verbal types that are most likely to appear. It sounds like one main issue with CR and RC is comprehension (due to some vocab issues). Unfortunately, it's tough to improve that a great deal in only a few weeks.
With tougher vocab, you can often figure things out well enough via context - not well enough to, say, tell someone else what the definition of the word is, but well enough to get a general idea. So whenever you see a word you don't know, don't stress too much - just try to understand all of the other words around it and see if you can get the basic idea. If so, in your mind, substitute another word (or a series of words to describe the concept) for that word you don't know.
Have you been studying the logic behind the wrong answers? That is, can you tell me why a tempting wrong answer is tempting, not just why it is wrong? Can you tell me why it would be tempting to cross off the right answer? On any problem, for each of the wrong answers, ask yourself: why would someone pick this? (And, of course, why it is wrong even though it is tempting.)
Also, when reviewing, think all the way through the logic of the right and wrong answers. Here's where the right answer fits into the argument (depending on what it's supposed to do - strengthen, weaken, etc), here's why the right answer does what it's supposed to do, here's why each wrong answer does NOT do what we're supposed to do on this problem, and so on.
I would start looking through the archives of problems discussed in the verbal folders and reading the teachers' explanations, so that you get a better understanding of how to think through a problem. You can also post problems yourself (though FYI - it's taking about a week or so at this point to get a reply, and you'll wait longer for a reply to problems in the General Math and Verbal folders). Also, if you post, make sure you read and follow the rules - if you don't follow the rules, you'll just be told to follow them in order to get your question answered and you'll have to wait even longer.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep