by StaceyKoprince Thu Jan 08, 2009 7:58 pm
OG questions are in rough order of difficulty for all question types EXCEPT Reading Comp.
Number Properties questions are very common on the test, so it's important to go back and review those concepts. The hardest thing about NP on the test tends to be that the test writers are very good at disguising the question topic, so that it's hard to even figure out what concept they're testing. At the back of your Number Properties book, you have problem sets from the OG for each chapter. Take the time to identify the specific clues (words, symbols, and particular combinations of words or descriptions) that should trigger you to think about specific concepts (e.g. prime numbers, or consecutive integers). As the questions get harder, they will no longer use the word "prime" or the word "consecutive" in the problem; instead, they will provide the definition of the concept somewhere in the question and you have to be able to recognize: oh, those words mean this question is about prime.
For CR and RC in general, make sure you are studying why the wrong answers are wrong. Be able to articulate:
- specifically why each wrong answer is wrong
- which wrong answer is the most tempting and why
- how to recognize that the tempting wrong answer is still wrong anyway so you can eliminate it
- why someone might be tempted to eliminate the right answer
Also, for both Draw and Conclusion (CR) and Inference (RC), the correct answer has to meet a very strict test: it must be 100% true according to the information in the argument or passage. If a particular answer does not have to be 100% true, if there's even a small chance that it might not be true, then that answer is wrong. If I tell you that chocolate is my favorite flavor of ice cream, you might infer that I like chocolate in general, and I like ice cream in general, and I like sweets in general. Those things may be true, but they don't have to be true - so none of those would be a correct inference or conclusion. On the other hand, it is 100% true that vanilla is not my favorite flavor of ice cream. (By definition, "favorite" is the ONE I like best.)
Here are some other things to think about in general as you study:
Was I able to CATEGORIZE this question by topic and subtopic? By process / technique?
Did I make a CONNECTION to previous experience? Or did I have to do it all from scratch?
Did I COMPREHEND the symbols, text, questions, statements, and answer choices?
Did I understand the CONTENT being tested?
Did I choose the best APPROACH? (a lot of the time, the way you try a problem the first time is NOT the best way to do the problem!)
Did I have the SKILLS to follow through?
Am I comfortable with OTHER STRATEGIES that would have worked, at least partially? How should I have made an educated guess?
Do I understand every TRAP & TRICK that the writer built into the question, including wrong answers?
Have I MASTERED this problem? Could I explain every aspect, fully, to someone else?
How will I RECOGNIZE similar problems in the future, so that I know what to do rather than having to figure everything out from scratch?
Also, when you get something wrong, figure out WHY you got it wrong. Then figure out what you need to do to minimize the chances of making those specific errors in the future. Then do whatever you need to do to make those things a habit for the future.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep