by StaceyKoprince Thu Sep 18, 2008 4:31 pm
It's important to ensure that your study is high-quality, not (just) high quantity. In fact, quantity without quality is not very effective at all. I'd much rather have you do fewer questions but spend more time on each question.
When you review problems, how do you review them? Of course, you figure out the right way to do it - everybody does that. But what about:
- why you got the problem wrong
- what you could do to minimize the chances of making that same mistake in future
- for verbal, why are the wrong answers tempting - why would someone pick a particular wrong answer? Why are they wrong anyway?
- what words / structure in the problem indicate the specific type of problem this is and give you clues as to what technique would be best to solve that problem?
And if you got it right, do you still review the problem?
- did you get it right for the right reason, or did you get a little lucky?
- is there a better way to do the problem? (more efficient? fewer chances to make a mistake? just easier in general for you?)
- what are the traps? how can you spot and avoid them on similar problems in the future? (this is much easier to learn on problems you get right than on problems you get wrong)
- how could you make an educated guess (eliminate wrong answers)? (again, much easier to learn on problems you get right
All of the above is designed to get you to one place: how do you recognize a problem of a similar type in future? If you have to figure everything out from scratch on this test, you won't maximize your score. If you can recognize what to do with even part of a problem, you have just greatly increased your chances of scoring well - both because you save time AND because you're trying something that you know worked before in a similar problem... so the chances are much better that it will work again on this one. If you can get to the point where you recognize something about a problem, at least how to start it and get rid of some answer choices, for maybe every other problem you see on a test, then you're in good shape.
If you're not thinking about how to recognize something again in future, however, then you're just leaving it up to chance. Sometimes you will recognize, sometimes you won't. And that means you're not maximizing your score potential.
Re: the exams, it's been a while since you've taken some of those (you presumably started taking them last March, when you you first started studying), so you won't remember a lot of the questions. If you don't remember a question, or only vaguely remember it, then it doesn't really matter that you've seen it before. In the event that you do see a question you completely remember, glance at the clock immediately and make yourself sit there for 2 min (or 1.5 on SC) before you move on. That way you won't also artificially inflate your score by saving time when you wouldn't normally save time. (Plus, if it's a question you got right before, then you aren't artificially inflating your score at all by getting it right again this time - that only happens if it is one that you really wouldn't know how to do if you were seeing it for the first time.)
So go look at the results of a recent (last 4 weeks) practice test, or take another, and figure out your strengths and weaknesses based on both the percentages you're getting and the time you're spending - it's not good enough to mostly get a certain category of things right but take too long on average to do so. Set up your study plan based on those specific strengths and weaknesses - follow the course to do a general review, but then go back to more of the fundamentals on weaknesses, and spend more time practicing higher level problems for your strengths. For both, though, do the kind of analysis I discussed above. And remember - analysis takes time. In one 2-hour study period, you might do 20 problems of some type (which takes 40 minutes) and then spend all of the remaining time analyzing.
Last edited by
StaceyKoprince on Wed Sep 24, 2008 9:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep