5 comments

  • Monday, Jun 30 2014

    CFC's advice is pure gold.

    I would like to add that old PTs come in handy BETWEEN PTs. For example, I just took PT 40 and missed 4 flaw in the reasoning questions (How does that even happen!). So, before my next PT, I am going to drag out the old questions, find some hard flaw questions (Cambridge is great for this) and drill them slowly, breaking the arguments down and seeing EXACTLY what the flaw is and seeing EXACTLY what each answer choice means. Some of those little boogers are so close to being right, but they're so, so wrong (as JY said in one of his blog posts).

    1
  • Sunday, Jun 29 2014

    Two things:

    1. That puppy is adorable.

    2. In terms of taking a full-length practice test, I think using the old PT's can be kind of tricky. You want a full PT to be completely new to you, and since a lot of study materials use old questions, sometimes you run into questions you've already seen. With that in mind, I think the usual recommendation is to use PT's 1-39 for practice and drilling (Cambridge's drilling packets are extremely useful) and PT's 40-72 for full-length tests.

    1
  • Saturday, Jun 28 2014

    Thanks everyone. Would any of you recommend retaking old PTs as well? What's the strategy with that?

    0
  • Saturday, Jun 28 2014

    I emphatically second what Jason said. Do NOT put yourself on a timeframe.

    First of all, you don't know how fast you will improve. You may improve faster than you expected or more slowly than you expected. Secondly, life happens, and when it does, it throws curveballs into our plans. And I don't plan on getting philosophical, so I'll stop there :)

    2
  • Saturday, Jun 28 2014

    I would love the answer to this questions too

    0

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