Was just curious as I was approved for a fee waiver.
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Interested! I'm in CST so let me know if you'd like to invite me!
Thank you for letting me know!
I wish I had the opposite. I am good at LG and decent at LR but RC is killing me!
Anyone have a good way to explain this question?
Could someone please help explain how they got to answer choice D?
Can someone please explain how they got to the right answer? I see that it is E, but how does it strengthen it?
Thought I edited the title, my bad. Question from PT 8 S1 Q 20
Found it pretty difficult to understand and wrap my head around.
Found it pretty difficult to understand and wrap my head around.
For tougher questions, do you recommend mapping the stimulus and answer choices so the answers are more clear like J.Y does in review? I'm just wondering because I feel like it will take a lot longer, but the answers you get will be more accurate.
@kimmelsara198 said:
I would write it out. Practice untimed questions and stick with them till you figure them out (think BR style). Once you start to see what you're looking for, it'll get easier to do under normal, timed conditions without having to write it out. You may also choose, on your PTs, to skip SA and PSA questions and come back to them at the end so you don't get bogged down on them in the middle of the section. I sometimes do this with parallel questions as I know they can be more time consuming.
Do you read the stim or question stem first? I started with stimulus first, and I will say it has been a big help reading the question first as it primes my brain what to look for when I read the stimulus. Just something to consider. I know people have strong opinions on it both ways, but it was something I found worked for me.
Good luck!
Thank you. I am currently am reading question stem first and then stimulus so I agree it does work in making me understand what I am looking for. I guess practice with the BR method will help me the most here, really appreciate it.
For the SA and PSA questions, I'm getting absolutely destroyed on the tougher ones. I think it is because I am not identifying the stimulus fast enough and missing the small details that get overlooked. Should I just map it out and understand how to piece together the stimulus first and take my time to decipher it and then answer the question, or should I be just mapping it out in my head and getting better with doing it that way? Anyone got any good strategies they can share? Thank you so much.
Love the Kamehameha example, amazing!
Hey I am interested. I am aiming for a 170!