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So what I gathered from this is to rail practice tests until my frontal lobe bleeds. Hell yeah
Okay, so, in the context of strengthening and weakening questions, am I to understand that the only way to evaluate them is by establishing or diminishing alternative explanations? This seems like it's the case, given that "For causal arguments specifically, using that framework requires evaluating other hypotheses to decide whether the proposed hypothesis is the true explanation."
Ensure that your surroundings are as devoid of stimulus as possible. No sounds, nothing visually interesting, etc. The actual conditions of the testing center are about as good as it gets to be honest so mimicking that environment will help you avoid distractions.
Is it dangerous to conflate "anti supported" with contradicted? That seems like an easier distinction if not.
I'm @ theshammay, feel free to add.
Where I got caught up here was that the viewers stated that they didn't want to watch celebrity gossip within the umbrella of TV news, and just saying that they didn't want to be perceived as watching the news felt general to the point of being misleading. How do we reconcile things like this?
Okay, but if a facility "requires" you to dry stuff at a high enough temperature, how do we have any indication that residential dryers can even reach those temperatures? There isn't enough for the mere suggestion that they should dry things at very high temperatures to lead officials to believe that their staff will or even have the means to execute this task. At least if hospital staff are immune there is a reduced mechanism for the transmission of bacteria through actively symptomatic staff officials.
just stick to your regular study schedule. I take a full PT on Mondays and Thursdays and lined up the official test just to feel like a regular PT day. Been trying to take them at the same time as my scheduled test too.
the 3 day cycle I did got me to a 180 in practice tests from a 157 diagnostic. You need to take a full practice test one day, spend the next day thoroughly reviewing every single wrong answer, and the third day studying the question types you most commonly get wrong. You will see progress, I promise.
Nope. Sadly, you just gotta wonder. Sometimes they release certain sections or tests. Difficult to know whether that's the one you actually took though and it could take a long time for them to turn it into a PT.
Take PTs at least twice a week and in the days in between, scrupulously review those wrong answers and ensure that you are understanding why you got the answers wrong and how you aren't going to make that mistake in the future. Go over EVERY wrong answer and eventually you will increase.* It will also help you build stamina.
My schedule is a 3 day cycle:
Untimed sections, 1 each. As long as it takes to get almost every answer right
Practice test.
Practice test review.
Try it out!
*If you are scoring in the 150s then it may be more helpful to look at the tags for the questions you keep getting wrong and review the associated fundamental topic.