On a recent PT I had -8 within the first 10 questions on the first LR section.

Otherwise, I scored 15 on the LR section. I could have gotten 23.

I am not sure if this is due to my anxiety or what...

Aren't the first 10 questions in a LR section generally on the easier side in comparison to mid/end of the section.

I really need at least a 161 on the December test.

HELP!

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10 comments

  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    @jennybains774 yes definitely do it before test day! I went back to the curriculum so I can't say much about it but I know that everyone has some different warm up that works for them. Some people do a combination of the three sections, nothing too difficult, but questions that they are familiar with but still gets their brain moving. How many questions you need to do to be warmed up but not overdoing is something you figure out through trial and error.

    But I would definitely recommend warming up - maybe 10 questions since you have difficulty with the first 10 - and then doing a new section of LR you haven't done to see if that makes a difference. Not a whole PT but try it out with one section and see if that helps.

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  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    @samanthaashley92715 said:

    I would look through the exact types of questions you got wrong. Before I learned to not do this, I took the LR part of a PT before I finished learning all of LR. I got -4 on one section and -10 on the other. I realized that the second section had 8 flaw questions, which I hadn't even learned about yet... so I got most of them wrong. The first section only had 2. That being said, you may just have a weakness in one or two types of questions, which were coincidentally packed into half of those 10 questions. It's worth looking into.

    @nikitamunjal950 said:

    Do you warm up before you take the test? As in do questions before the test? I had a similar problem too where my first LR section was a looot worse than my second section and I realized it's because I never warmed up before the exam.

    I did take a look to see if there were any specific question types but no luck.. I only missed 1 during BR for the first 14 questions.

    I haven't tried that @nikitamunjal950 before! Maybe that will help with my anxiety? But would you recommend warming up before on test day as well too then?

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  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    @wraith985-4026 said:

    To answer your question directly - no, not typical. But the better answer, in my opinion, is that it doesn't matter if it's typical, it only matters that you fix it.

    Only you can tell whether you missed those questions due to anxiety (or some other meta-aspect of the test) or whether the questions themselves actually gave you difficulty. Reconstruct the thought process you employed in the moment for each question. It shouldn't be difficult from that point to tell whether you have any mechanical difficulty with the question, or whether it was anxiety or some other meta-aspect of the test that got you this time through.

    I honestly think it's due to anxiety because during BR I knew the exact answer to the question within seconds. I usually can understand the stimulus as well, but when doing a PT... seriously have no idea what happens...

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  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    @nikitamunjal950 said:

    Did you do a BR? If so, were you able to correct those questions?

    Was there anything different in your routine before taking this section?

    Yes, I got only one wrong within the first fourteen questions when BRing. No, it was the same as usual. I have no idea what to do at this point..

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  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    Do you warm up before you take the test? As in do questions before the test? I had a similar problem too where my first LR section was a looot worse than my second section and I realized it's because I never warmed up before the exam.

    0
  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    I would look through the exact types of questions you got wrong. Before I learned to not do this, I took the LR part of a PT before I finished learning all of LR. I got -4 on one section and -10 on the other. I realized that the second section had 8 flaw questions, which I hadn't even learned about yet... so I got most of them wrong. The first section only had 2. That being said, you may just have a weakness in one or two types of questions, which were coincidentally packed into half of those 10 questions. It's worth looking into.

    0
  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    To answer your question directly - no, not typical. But the better answer, in my opinion, is that it doesn't matter if it's typical, it only matters that you fix it.

    Only you can tell whether you missed those questions due to anxiety (or some other meta-aspect of the test) or whether the questions themselves actually gave you difficulty. Reconstruct the thought process you employed in the moment for each question. It shouldn't be difficult from that point to tell whether you have any mechanical difficulty with the question, or whether it was anxiety or some other meta-aspect of the test that got you this time through.

    3
  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    Did you do a BR? If so, were you able to correct those questions?

    Was there anything different in your routine before taking this section?

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  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    @nikitamunjal950 said:

    @jennybains774 Any chance you made a mistake when transferring your scores to the analytics?

    How many do you usually get correct in the first 10 questions?

    No I am sure. Around 8 at least :(

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  • Wednesday, Nov 15 2017

    @jennybains774 Any chance you made a mistake when transferring your scores to the analytics?

    How many do you usually get correct in the first 10 questions?

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