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dw2657997
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dw2657997
Monday, Jun 3, 2019

@dw2657997 No worries :) You'll be fine tomorrow! Best of luck.

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dw2657997
Sunday, Jun 2, 2019

Hey - if you're taking the exam tomorrow, you should definitely prioritize rest today above anything else. Your goal now is to function as well as you can tomorrow. Your test scores look really good and consistent enough, and any intensive prep you attempt now will either (1) have no effect on your performance tomorrow (since these are skills that you need time to solidify, and that you can't do overnight) or (2) negatively affect your performance tomorrow, since you might burn out/be psychologically thrown off by an odd score.

Don't add to the stress you're already going through and don't chase the score. At most, do some light review. Be confident in your skills - your historical test data speaks for itself - and don't question yourself! Good luck tomorrow!

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dw2657997
Saturday, May 4, 2019

I'm having the same problem! I've reloaded the page, switched from Firefox to Chrome, and cleared my cache, but I'm still have the same issue. @studentservice

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dw2657997
Sunday, Apr 28, 2019

Agreed. It feels like A LOT the first time you do it, but it really gets easier the more you do them. Don't worry about what score you'll get in the PTs - focus on the process and you should be fine. Good luck!

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PrepTests ·
PT18.S2.Q10
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dw2657997
Wednesday, Jan 2, 2019

#help I initially chose D as my answer. I correctly identified the second sentence as the MC, and therefore thought that the correct answer had to directly address the ease/difficulty of acquiring self-knowledge of one's wants → thus choosing D. I now see that D is purely an assumption and is not the MC, but I'm not completely happy with E either.

I see what JY is talking about when he says that you must reference the context and conclusion to see that E is the correct answer. However, E presumes that in order to be a reliable authority on X, it is relatively easy to acquire knowledge of X. How can we make that logical jump with confidence?

To me, it still seems like an arbitrary jump. For example, wouldn't it be reasonable to believe that one can be a reliable authority on X even if it's hard to acquire knowledge on X (e.g. say you worked really hard to acquire knowledge of quantum physics and are now a reliable authority on it through sheer hard work)? Wouldn't that challenge the strength of our logical jump that lead us to E as the correct answer?

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