Every section. You can learn a ton from BRing RC and LG.
For RC, perhaps pay attention to things like question types you notice popping up repeatedly, parts of the passage that are frequently asked about (like author’s tone, main point, purpose of a paragraph, etc), and the reason some tricky ACs are wrong. If you thoroughly BR enough RC sections, you’ll start noticing some major trends and start getting a feel for what parts of the passage you need to focus on.
For LG, take your time to work through games and see if you can find inferences you didn’t notice during your timed attempt, try splitting the board if you didn’t while timed, try doing the game without splitting if you split while timed, try to find ways you could’ve more quickly solved “brute force” questions, etc. Like RC, you’ll start making discoveries that’ll help you a ton when faced with similar challenges in the future.
Comments
Every section. You can learn a ton from BRing RC and LG.
For RC, perhaps pay attention to things like question types you notice popping up repeatedly, parts of the passage that are frequently asked about (like author’s tone, main point, purpose of a paragraph, etc), and the reason some tricky ACs are wrong. If you thoroughly BR enough RC sections, you’ll start noticing some major trends and start getting a feel for what parts of the passage you need to focus on.
For LG, take your time to work through games and see if you can find inferences you didn’t notice during your timed attempt, try splitting the board if you didn’t while timed, try doing the game without splitting if you split while timed, try to find ways you could’ve more quickly solved “brute force” questions, etc. Like RC, you’ll start making discoveries that’ll help you a ton when faced with similar challenges in the future.
Initially, I interpreted the videos on BR as advising BR for LR.
I will step it up and start doing a complete BR.
Thanks for the thorough answer!