|
It is probably good to focus on the types of questions that she got wrong. Now don't all laugh at me, but even now, I would find those analogies difficult. What is bizarre about that is that I am a lawyer by training, and I was a fabulous law student, and it is all about making analogies, in many areas. I think that test training for questions that don't necessarily make sense could help. I think I always wanted to read too much into the questions.
A funny small related digression: In college I signed up for a course that was supposed to be the biggest "gut" class (easy to those of you not familiar with this slang). It was Natural Resources. The test was true or false. When I got to the question "Bread comes from a store" I quietly got up, threw the test in garbage and RAN to the office that handles course drops. To me it was a philosophy question. Yes, bread comes from the store, but it also comes from the earth. I STILL don't know what the guy was driving at, or for that matter which answer he thought was correct. BTW, was it T or F? I am not sure if this deficiency has hurt me in life, but I tend to think not.
|