When i get a certain question type wrong on LR, i go to the question bank and find the same question type and do the hardest ones (level 5) of that question type. If i get them wrong at the beginning, I start on level 3 or 4 and gradually move to higher difficulty question.
@cooljon525 said:
When i get a certain question type wrong on LR, i go to the question bank and find the same question type and do the hardest ones (level 5) of that question type. If i get them wrong at the beginning, I start on level 3 or 4 and gradually move to higher difficulty question.
@cooljon525 I like that I am definitely going to try that out!
I recommend taking photos of the questions you got wrong and sorting the photos by type. I kept them on my phone and when I had an extra minute (i.e. waiting in line at the pharmacy, etc) I'd open them up and talk myself through the logic of the correct answer in my head.
I also recommend writing out explanations of the correct answer (i.e. why A is correct and B/C/D/E are not, pointing to specific parts of the text and using quotes if necessary). I kept these in a document and would read over my explanations from time to time. It helped me catch flaws in my thinking to do it on paper.
Comments
When i get a certain question type wrong on LR, i go to the question bank and find the same question type and do the hardest ones (level 5) of that question type. If i get them wrong at the beginning, I start on level 3 or 4 and gradually move to higher difficulty question.
@cooljon525 I like that I am definitely going to try that out!
Interesting ....
Is there certain LR cookie cutter structures (just like LG) strategies anyone uses for LR?
@Trusttheprocess Two things:
I recommend taking photos of the questions you got wrong and sorting the photos by type. I kept them on my phone and when I had an extra minute (i.e. waiting in line at the pharmacy, etc) I'd open them up and talk myself through the logic of the correct answer in my head.
I also recommend writing out explanations of the correct answer (i.e. why A is correct and B/C/D/E are not, pointing to specific parts of the text and using quotes if necessary). I kept these in a document and would read over my explanations from time to time. It helped me catch flaws in my thinking to do it on paper.
That's how I "foolproofed" LR. Good luck!