Xiggi Method?Taken vs. Review

<p>Let’s say for one section you take, at however long you need. How long should you spend reviewing that one section? Right now i am at a point where i get like 1-3 wrong on CR and Math and like 7 wrong in writing… How long should i review those sections? </p>

<p>I also have several QAS’s, how do i utilize those to the best of my ability since there are no explanations?</p>

<p>I think you are pretty much set for CR and Math. Damn…I wish I missed only one to 3 on CR. I suggest you read Sparknotes’ Seven Deadly Screw-ups for Writing and review your mistakes. Categorize them into “parallelism,” “misused modifier,” etc. and target your weaknesses.</p>

<p>^ **** stop advertising on and spamming the forum</p>

<p>seriously!!!</p>

<p>@trufflie… and its like 1-3 per section… but i usually end up totaling -6 for CR and -4-6 for math. What are my section scores in that case?</p>

<p>bumpppppppp</p>

<p>-6 CR (raw) would be like a 750
-5 Math (raw) would be like a 690</p>

<p>can someone comment on my opening post?</p>

<p>Review your answers for as long as it takes for you to understand each and every single question.</p>

<p>Review so thoroughly that if presented with a test that tests similar concepts, you would score a 2400. It’s been working for me. I started with an 1870 and now I’m consistent;y scoring 2100-2200. I haven’t even had a consistent practice schedule, and I haven’t really memorized Direct Hits, i know maybe a couple words. I feel that the review is when you increase your chances to score higher.</p>

<p>i see… yeah how do you review for CR questions? like passage based?</p>

<p>Bump!ochar</p>

<p>^Well, I find the easiest way for me is to glance over the questions and see the first line reference one. I remember the line reference and fast read to that point(but make sure to understand the passage). I read about two lines ahead of the line reference, and then I read the question and eliminate the wrong answers based on evidence. I go through with this for the line reference questions. I usually never miss line reference questions. So yeah. Then I answer the remaining ones. That’s my way–Find yours!</p>

<p>But what’s the correct way of realizing why one answer is incorrect and why one isn’t?</p>

<p>and is there any good way to do this for QASs?</p>

<p>bump10char</p>

<p>bump10char</p>

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</p>

<p>What exactly do you mean by this?</p>

<p>I mean, why is one answer correct and one answer incorrect.</p>