- Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:54 pm
#74202
Hi ncolicci11!
To best assess your situation, it would be helpful to know a bit more:
1.) How do you do with the timing and pacing of the sections? Do you run out of time at the end? Do you start to rush through those last few?
2.) Do you do each question in the section in order, or do you ever skip questions and come back to them?
3.) When you go back and review these questions, why do you think you're getting them incorrect? When you look at them later without time constraints and without having just been working through a full section, are you able to see the answer more clearly? Or are the questions still difficult? When you assess why you missed the question, do you find it's because you misinterpreted the question stem? Or misidentified the conclusion? Neglected to prephrase? Etc.
There are likely a couple of things at work here. First, often the questions toward the end are more difficult. The first 10 questions in an LR section tend to be easier on average than the later questions. In the teens, you may have a few very difficult questions as well as some above average difficulty questions. And in the 20s, you may have several above average difficulty questions. If you tend to just miss the more difficult questions, you need to make sure your foundational skills are strong--it's sometimes easy to neglect those foundational skills when you're dealing with easier questions but it can become very important when dealing with more difficult questions. So make sure you are consistently working on your ability to analyze arguments (identify conclusions, identify how premises support the conclusion, identify why premises don't fully support conclusions, etc.), your prephrasing skills, your ability to identify question stems, etc.
If you can get these questions correct when you're not under time constraints or burned out from a full section, it may be more about stamina. The best way to build mental stamina is similar to the best way to build muscle stamina--you've got to keep exercising those brain muscles by continuing to take practice sections and full tests. A big part of being fully prepared for this test is just practicing your ability to focus on tough concepts for several hours.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey