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spencerrobertsmithtn358
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spencerrobertsmithtn358
Friday, May 30

Depends on if you have a score already, if you have no scores on file, keep whatever you get unless you really feel like you absolutely bombed it below what was expected. Then take it again, if it's higher, keep it, lower cancel it. From my knowledge a cancelled score isn't a bad sign, you could have been sick, you could have a death in the family, you could have just got a point below normal. Colleges have no idea and should not hold it against you within reason such as multiple cancelled in a row.

The person above me said something very true, a 155 and above is better than most people so feel happy with that for sure and just commit yourself to a slightly better performance in the future. If you show improvement every time, no need to cancel a score or choose not to take it since you've already paid. Get the experience and feel. The notion of cancelling just because it didn't go perfect or even necessarily how you expected is a bit overblown. You do need at least a score to get into college.

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spencerrobertsmithtn358
Wednesday, May 28

This is what I do and it helps me, but I honestly just don't let it stress me out. That sounds like a no shit concept but genuinely it isn't that bad, the weight of it all just feels like a lot. The reality is a question only takes a minute or less. The max you get is 35 minutes at a time for just 4 sections. That's a movie with a piss break in the middle. I try and remain thoughtless, I don't think about times, I don't think about how I'm doing so far, I don't get hung on questions, I don't over think questions. Just keep moving, and the exam will be over before you realize. This applies to back to back practices too. Sometimes you do good and sometimes you don't, as long as you don't take the time to stop and smell the roses and keep moving your mental won't slow you down or weigh on you

emotionally or energetically.

If you've drilled and drilled and drilled and your timing is automatic, then the test will just fill itself out. That makes it all not feel as exhausting, just don't think and keep trusting your gut and the exam will just work itself out. I hope and pray you experience good things!

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spencerrobertsmithtn358
Friday, May 16

1. Determine conclusion

2. Negate an answer choice till it makes the conclusion impossible.

This is the best method for consistently correct answer choices fast.

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spencerrobertsmithtn358
Wednesday, Jun 04

Personally, and again this is my opinion, but I do not think you can "waste practice questions" like many people say, there are literally thousands and thousands of questions and I do not think you will ever see all of them. Assuming you somehow see all of them, by the time you start over you will have forgotten the correct answer's.

My best recommendation for improving is doing 25 of your weakness on medium or hard (medium is a tad easier and confidence boosting, hard will be pretty similar difficulty to test day) for unlimited time, you will see the same question so many times your routine will become second-nature. Apply strategies that work, test new methods, think clearly. Then review what you got wrong and why. Then do another 25 of your weakness in 35 mins just like a real section and from then out to get your pacing and timing correct.

For me personally, that has translated to the best results. Learn, review, application. Then work on your next weakness the same way. The only way to improve is by seeing every way they try and trick you. Taking 25 questions in 35 minutes is the expectation on test day and if you're comfortable doing that IT WILL SHOW. It is the most stressful study method with lots of questions, but it truly will translate. I wish you all the best!!

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