Personally, I did timed PTs every alternate day, a week before my actual exam. And I also practised some questions half an hour before the actual exam (This prevented me from wasting time on the first section. As because of the stress on the day of the exam, applicants tend to go blank at the beginning of the first section, and it usually takes 5 to 6 minutes to get back focus. However, everyone is different, so what worked for me might not work for you. Assess your own strength/weakness and follow any advice accordingly.)
I have been trying to take a PT every other day and on my days off, I try to do timed sections/drill question types. I plan to not do anything the day prior to my test though, because I don't want to feel tired from studying on test day.
I am taking/reviewing one last PT exam, studying strategies for questions I find most difficult in the LR section, and blind reviewing LGs from the 80s. Best of luck!
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3 comments
Personally, I did timed PTs every alternate day, a week before my actual exam. And I also practised some questions half an hour before the actual exam (This prevented me from wasting time on the first section. As because of the stress on the day of the exam, applicants tend to go blank at the beginning of the first section, and it usually takes 5 to 6 minutes to get back focus. However, everyone is different, so what worked for me might not work for you. Assess your own strength/weakness and follow any advice accordingly.)
All the best!
I have been trying to take a PT every other day and on my days off, I try to do timed sections/drill question types. I plan to not do anything the day prior to my test though, because I don't want to feel tired from studying on test day.
I am taking/reviewing one last PT exam, studying strategies for questions I find most difficult in the LR section, and blind reviewing LGs from the 80s. Best of luck!