1. Yes, the first 10 questions thing is a complete myth. :)
2. You need to develop the 1min time sense described in the time management article. Also, buy yourself a can of tennis balls. Write "Nice shot!" on one with a marker. Keep it handy while you're studying.
When you're at the 1min mark and asking yourself "Do I know what I'm doing right now?" - if the answer is anything other than "100% yes!" then pick up a tennis ball, say Nice shot! out loud (and mean it!), figure out how to pick an answer, and move on.
When studying, make sure you take time to learn how to eliminate wrong answers on all kinds of different questions. Then, when you're in the "Nice shot!" position above, you'll have an idea about how to guess on this particular problem, because you'll already have studied how to find wrong answers.
The Time Management article has links to two more articles on Educated Guessing - make sure to use those too.
On quant, you are first trying to solve and then, if that isn't working (roughly around 1 min), then you try to eliminate and move on.
On verbal, you're doing the opposite - you're trying to get rid of all of the wrong answers until you only have one left.
Careless mistakes:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... to-win-it/You don't necessarily need to do the whole error log - up to you - but any time you make a careless mistake, figure out *exactly* why you made it, then figure out you could have set things up or wrote things down or whatever differently to avoid that mistake. Then make yourself re-do the work or writing or whatever it was in the error-minimizing way.
Careless errors = things you did know how to do but you made a "silly" mistake. Holes in your foundation = lower level things that you just don't know. Those are two separate things. If you have holes in your foundation, you have to go back to study whatever those things are. If you are making careless errors, that tends to be more about process, not what you know, and so you have to find ways to make your process very systematic. (eg, I never do math in my head - I write everything down - because I make fewer careless mistakes that way. I never try to speed up and save a bunch of time on something I already know how to do, because then I'm just introducing a way to make a careless mistake on something I know how to do. Now, I may answer that question more quickly than the average person, because it is something I can do, but I'm not going to push myself to go faster than whatever my own natural pace is for that or skip steps I really should be doing - or I might mess it up. People are tempted to do that because they think they need to save time for the really hard ones elsewhere... but I know that I'll just be saying "Nice shot! Your point!" on those, anyway. :)
for certain OG questions, I seem to "remember" solutions from my previous practice, so instead of actually figuring out the answer on my own, I recall the solutions from before.
Are you at your desired scoring level yet? (Obviously not, or you wouldn't still be studying!) So that means you're not necessarily done studying those questions. I don't care whether you remember the answer. I care whether you know how to recognize a similar question in future even if it uses somewhat different language. I care that you know how to make an educated guess. I care that you've found the most efficient solution, even if that's not the official solution shown in the book. And so on.
Take a look at this:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/articles/a ... roblem.cfmThese are the kinds of things to think about when reviewing problems (which is where most of your learning happens).
You showed very nice improvement on verbal on your 2nd official test - plus you said you did have timing issues there, so there's room for more improvement if you can fix those timing problems.
Quant, obviously, went down - and I'm guessing timing was a significant part of that. You definitely need to fix that before getting in there again - as you discovered, significant enough timing problems can kill your score.