<p>My parents suggest that I write the wrong questions for every practice test; does anyone find doing so effective? Or should I seek additional material, learn half-forgotten topics from Silverturtle’s guide, RR or Sparknotes? My score is a consistent 730 and the MC is holding against my way to an 800… Thanks a lot, guys. :)</p>
<p>I have never heard of that method before. I can’t see it being very effective. My guide will be released tomorrow, though. :)</p>
<p>What exactly do you mean by “write the wrong questions for every practice test”? Do you mean simply writing the correct answer out? If so, I agree that that wouldn’t be very effective.</p>
<p>Oh. I should clarify. They said that I should write out the question, then solve it again, and look at the answer to see what went wrong. They said that I should come up with an explanation afterwards.</p>
<p>um that is kind of wierd. the asian parents like forcing things into ur head through rote memorization. I don’t really like that cuz its hard, boring and ineffective, so dont do, just like understand the grammatical rule behind the question and know WHY you got it wrong. </p>
<p>If your memory is not the best, then simply flag the numbers of questions on each practice test and put them into a word doc so u can go back later and see if u remember WHY the correct answer is correct. By that I mean try the problem out again, and if you get it right or wrong, make sure u underrstand why the answer is correct or incorrect.</p>
<p>Alright, the guide is up! :)</p>
<p>@dipole Yes. My parents are super-Asian
and they sometimes tell me nonsensical things like rote memory. I was doubtful and as you said, I will strive to know the concepts by heart.</p>
<p>@silverturtle Lier. HAHAHA Joking.</p>