So the following is the order that I attempt again when I come back after I skip them during the 1st pass in an LR section:

  • The Qs that I skipped without looking at answer choices not because I realized they were particularly difficult but because I simply couldn't focus at the moment.
  • The Qs that I had to force myself to pick one over the other, very attractive contender.
  • The Qs that I realized they are one of the most difficult Qs in the section and so I know that spending more time on those Qs will not necessarily lead to getting them correct.
  • Do you guys have any other suggestions?

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    2 comments

    • Thursday, Jan 25 2018

      I tend to go back to whatever ones I think I have the best chance at getting correct in the shortest amount of time. If there's a question(s) where I was stuck between two answer choices, I go back to these first on my round two. I usually find that with these I just needed some time away to come back with a fresh set of eyes.

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    • Thursday, Jan 25 2018

      I don't exactly have a rule-set, and I think there is something to be said for developing an innate, personal sense of which questions to come back to. But to try and explain my process a bit... in most cases I have an LR question circled for one of two reasons (a) I don't know what's going on after the first read, and (b) I think I know what is going on with the question, but it's just hard and I was wasting time.

      On the principle of going for the lowest-hanging fruit, I will try and return to (a)-type questions first, since I just need a fresh look at the question. (b)-type questions I go back to last, since I know for sure that they're hard questions, and that is relatively less low hanging fruit.

      I guess the TL;DR is this: I go back to what I believe to be the lowest-hanging fruit.

      I think this is very similar to what you've outlined, but maybe taken from a different angle.

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