I haven't seen the Kaplan score reports, no - so I don't know how to read them any better than you do!
Do they give you per-question timing data? If so, then you can do a lot of what you need to do, though you may not be able to do it exactly the way I say in my article.
Speaking of, you do know you have timing problems, so let's talk about that. I'm assuming (without looking at the old thread - it's late and I'm jet-lagged - I'm sorry!) that you were dealing with timing issues before, too. How was your 1-minute sense this time around? Is it still there and are you using it? Or has that skill atrophied?
As a reminder, see section 4 of this article:
http://tinyurl.com/GMATTimeManagementAnd if you're struggling to cut yourself off on quant, here's a newer article that might help with the big picture decision-making:
https://www.manhattanprep.com/gmat/blog ... -the-gmat/Next, I wonder whether part of going too fast on verbal is due to mental fatigue. You're basically "over it" and just want the test to be done, so you speed up. If so, then fixing the earlier issues with quant (and maybe IR?) will help you to still have more mental energy by the time you get to the verbal section. Then you'll be better able to make yourself stick with it, be systematic, and get those points.
Okay, in terms of your buckets, I notice that you're mostly giving overall categories (eg, Alg, Geo). Is that because this is what the report gives you? Do they give you any data broken down by sub-categories within those overall categories? If so, just make sure you're drilling down, as it might be the case that you're really good at most parts of Algebra but one part needs more attention.
No careless mistakes at all? Really? Wow. That's amazing. (Or have you just not looked at the individual questions yet? That's one the test report obviously can't identify for you.
For holes in foundation, try looking at the individual questions to see whether you messed up anything that you know you knew how to do routinely when you were 12 to 16. If so, put that in "holes in foundation."
You have Algebra overall in all 3 buckets. Which is it?
Each thing should only be able to go in one bucket. If Algebra can be broken down into sub-topics, then put those sub-topics in the relevant buckets. Ditto Properties of Sets - you have that in buckets 1 and 2.
For Verbal, you have everything in either bucket 1 or 3. That means you don't have anything to work on in bucket 2. If the score reports aren't useful enough, you may just have to look at the individual questions and evaluate based on how you feel about the problem. If you think, "Hey, I should have gotten that!" or "Oh, I get it now," then put it in bucket 2. If you think, "Nope, I still don't understand that, even after reading the explanation," then put it in bucket 3.
Also, I don't know Kaplan's verbal classifications, so it would help if you could also tell me the question type. For instance, is Global = RC? Such as a main idea question? And what is Usage? Sorry I can't help more on that part of things!