It allows you to focus on the process rather than just worrying about getting the right answer. It also will tell you if you've improved and what you've improved on. Similarly, it will tell you what you may still need to work on, especially if you get the same questions wrong!
Ultimately, you're score will likely be inflated a bit, but it's great practice either way!
YES! This may not have been necessary to getting my score, but it was certainly very helpful.
I've arguably learned more through retakes than through fresh takes, at least later in my prep. Retakes reveal ACs you got lucky with the first time, test your reasoning on questions you think you understood the first time around, and allow you to practice various strategies, including skipping strategies and your general approach to RC passages.
As the September test date loomed, I took a lot of retakes in the 70s, which I think was crucial to understanding exactly what was going on in the newest tests. It's hard to see such patterns, unless you're exposing yourself to them repeatedly. And plowing through fresh 70s just to get used to them is dangerously wasteful.
I've found going back through old problems to be one the most useful things I have done so far. I haven't gone back through old PT's (though I plan to), but I've gone back through most of the CC twice now and the second time through really helped.
It not only reinforces skills, it also exposes concepts that you didn't completely understand for the first time. If you missed the same question twice it shows you what you truly need to work on.
I think it has some application but to me it should be done "unscored" which means you should put ZERO and possibly negative stock in your score outcome. It also has some drawbacks if you start to lose your ability/skills in responding to fresh material. They are very different encounters.
Comments
It allows you to focus on the process rather than just worrying about getting the right answer. It also will tell you if you've improved and what you've improved on. Similarly, it will tell you what you may still need to work on, especially if you get the same questions wrong!
Ultimately, you're score will likely be inflated a bit, but it's great practice either way!
I've arguably learned more through retakes than through fresh takes, at least later in my prep. Retakes reveal ACs you got lucky with the first time, test your reasoning on questions you think you understood the first time around, and allow you to practice various strategies, including skipping strategies and your general approach to RC passages.
As the September test date loomed, I took a lot of retakes in the 70s, which I think was crucial to understanding exactly what was going on in the newest tests. It's hard to see such patterns, unless you're exposing yourself to them repeatedly. And plowing through fresh 70s just to get used to them is dangerously wasteful.