3 comments

  • Wednesday, Apr 23

    @ariyanephillips23254 I have just been BR everything which I am realizing now I should try to only BR the ones im not confident in. Sometimes I think I got a question 100% right and it ends up wrong which is what has held me back from only reviewing ones I am unconfident in.

    1
  • Do you blind review the questions that you were not confident about or did you review the whole drill?

    0
  • Tuesday, Apr 22

    I agree with hiding answer and timing information to try and remove myself from the bias of just choosing the answer I already chose, accepting my previous reasoning, and moving on. Typically in BR, I find it best to re-work the question and answer methods in depth to really make sure that I can locate where I made an error in case I get the question wrong and have to review. I also find value in re-reading some answer choices that I eliminated during my drill and completely re-evaluating them more with more scrutiny to eliminate them permanently- this has also led me to catch some errors, mainly in the strength of qualifiers or a tangle of negating words.

    I think that if increasing familiarity with the test is the goal, then you should hide the answer and COMPREHENSIVELY re-evaluate the questions without a time constraint in blind review.

    1

Confirm action

Are you sure?