I'm just reviewing all the verbal sections that I've done so far. For CR, it seems like in more than one question, there is a good answer and then there is a better answer. I have a tendency to find an answer, think it's good and move on without reading all the answer choices. A good practice would be to thoroughly read all the answer choices with a comprehension of what they each say and then narrow the answer choice down.
With regards to SC, I noticed that when I'm unsure, I ought to trust my instincts. I had a hunch that a certain answer was correct but wasn't 100% sure. So I chose A because it also seemed correct.
Also, during my GMAT class, the instructor suggested that the class look at old SAT or LSAT questions for extra reading comprehension or critical reasoning help. He also suggested to not use sample problems from either the Princeton Review or Kaplan books because he could always tell when a question was not a real GMAT question. I've been following his suggestions about not using problems from PR or Kaplan and I'm thinking about taking him up on his LSAT suggestion. I'm pretty sure that I have it in me to ace the math section of the GMAT. I did perfect yesterday on a data sufficiency and the most I've missed on a problem solving section is one. I have in my hands a few LSATs. I haven't started the OG, yet, but I'm exhausting my resources as far as verbal is concerned. I've been focusing my studies on sentence correction since that seems to be the area I need the most help on. I've done a few critical reasoning sets and no reading comprehension sets.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment