Been going through the curriculum now for roughly 4 weeks. A lot of people want to know how long does it take to improve their score by X amount. Since I'm not regularly taking PT's yet, am curious (for those who feel like they've mastered the material) how long it takes to master the fundamentals of the curriculum (e.g., the Lawgic translations, identifying/analyzing premise and conclusion, grammar parsing, etc.). Did you have to watch the videos more than once? Or is this an endless pursuit?
Comments
http://7sage.com/discussion/#/discussion/2584/why-knowledge-is-not-enough
IMO it is time well spent. By the time I got to PTs, it was about applying the methods I had learned quickly, rather than spinning my wheels trying to remember things. I still struggled with LG initially and went back to drill those a few times.
Hope that helps!
I also wanted to ask as material piles up each week and you have to keep up with lecture it freaks me out that theres not enough time to review stuff we have learned the previous weeks. Is that something we should be doing? Or will the start PTs help with beginning to practice the material as a whole together? I am assuming that is the case and that is why I was advised to take practice exams for 4 months I am assuming to be able to get better each week and constantly reviewing every question type and so on.
Lastly timing! I have definitely improved with accuracy untimed, but when I do the problem sets of 5 for LR especially for the difficult sets my accuracy sucks, will that come with practicing from PTs? Is it okay to start PTs in a month which is what my cirriculum says even though I have not really mastered timing. @"GSU Hopeful"
I would also add that even if you have to do things repetitively to understand them, that it's okay. Everyone has a different learning process and one doesn't make you dumber than the other. You should, however, focus on learning actively rather than passively -- I find that makes a difference in speed and comprehension/memory. Some days I would try to work through material after working 12 hours and would be so tired I wouldn't even comprehend what I was studying. That's passive learning, and you want to make sure you give yourself an opportunity to be awake and engaged in what you're doing (active learning). So if speed and repetition are what currently worry you, then don't stress it and just keep making changes in your studying so that you are getting the most out of it.
Lastly, I'm a firm believer that timing will come with experience and a firm grasp of the fundamentals. Timing won't matter when your accuracy is shit. I don't care how early you finish a section when you go 15/25. That's pointless. Go at a pace that you can get your accuracy to a comfortable level. Then start speeding it up. Never sacrifice accuracy for speed. It should be the other way around. People don't score high by finishing as fast as possible. They score high by getting questions correct. As the military saying goes, slow is smooth and smooth is fast. The timing will come. When you reach the end of the curriculum and have seen everything, start hitting them. Of course you have to test the waters first. But, don't forget the fundamentals either. The caution that goes into not PTing before you're ready originates from the damage you can do to yourself by burning through PT after PT without really knowing what you're doing.
The study schedule is a guideline. Its flexible. JY put it there to be a guide for you. If something comes up and you get behind... shit happens. Do your best to catch back up without sacrificing the material. If you make it into some legalistic "OMG I'm behind" kind of a thing, you'll burn out and get to a state of capitulation from the pressure of "having to catch up". Use it as a guideline and use it to your advantage. Best of luck to you. We're here to help.
Also, you don't want to complete every problem set during the curriculum run. Do the minimum that gets you acclimated to question types and then move forward. When you start PTing, you want fresh drill material to go back to in order to shore up the weaknesses that will pop up during this phase.