- Tue Jun 26, 2018 9:37 pm
#47057
Hi, Margo,
Absolutely keep putting your work on paper. Trying to ponder things in your head will likely take up more time and can lead to additional errors.
However, be systematic about your diagramming. Get the global information down in your primary diagram. Make deducutions as possible, but don't spin your wheels needlessly. Sometimes when I am having trouble grasping the mechanics of the game, I'll work through a hypothetical scenario as part of my initial work just to see how everything operates. Sometimes this leads me to an deduction or two. Sometimes this leads me nowhere. The bottom line is I'm keeping my pencil moving in an effort to understand the game.
When you're working on a local question, do make your mini diagram. To be more efficient, you can check at certain intervals to see whether you've found the right answer. In other words, if it's a Must Be True question, when you discover something important, like V must be in position 4, you can check the answer choices to see whether you've got it. If it's not there, you can get back to work with your diagram to discover something else.
You might consider prioritizing the local questions before the global questions (except for Global-List, which should always go first). In other words, work through the hypotheticals of the local questions to see what happens in the game. You'll have lots of opportunities to see how variables interact with each other, what the implications of rules are, etc.
When you do the global questions, think first about any big observations you might have made. Were there any big inferences you noticed up front or as you work through the questions? Often these deductions are tested on global questions. If you make the connection between a deduction you made and a global question, you can sometimes go directly to the right answer. Even if you can't get directly to the correct answer, you might be able to use your observations to rule out a couple possibilities so that you have fewer answer choices to consider.
I do encourage you to keep diagramming on global questions, but as discussed above, just try to be strategic about it. Look at the answer choices and see which one you might want to consider first. Which ones do you think are unlikely to be correct? Which ones can you rule out up front? Pick the answer that looks like it's most likely to be correct. Diagram it out to verify whether it's correct or not. If it is correct, you will discover this through your diagram. Even though you're doing a diagram, you're being efficient. You're working in a directed fashion and not just cycling through option after option.
Sometimes you'll get stuck on a killer question for which you might have to consider every answer choice. If this is the case, no worries. Don't second guess yourself; just work through the possibilities. If you've been efficient elsewhere, you will have saved up enough time to be more thorough on these hard questions.
It's a game of budgeting your time; it's not all-or-nothing. I encourage you to work through each game you attempt at least one additional time as part of your review. Try to notice connections you might have missed the first time. Think about ways you could have done the game more quickly. I always learn more from games upon review. Use these lessons you learn to think strategically about similar situations you encounter in future games.
I hope this helps!