I'm doing pretty well overall with RC, but I can't breach past the 2-5 missed average. On harder passages, I'm almost always getting 1-2 incorrect. At this point, I am able to comprehend just about every passage thrown my way, but the questions themselves occasionally leave me scrambling to find the answer.
I realize there's really no strong consensus on RC tactics, but for those within the near-perfect range, what is your average time spent on simply reading the passage (this can include notating, note-taking, et cetera). I typically spend just under three minutes (2:40 is a relatively reliable number for reference) with moderate underlining/circling as well as minor note taking. The rest of my time is spent of the questions.
Thanks in advance for any input!
Comments
I do take note though that it always takes me 3min to finish the passage.
If a question leaves you scrambling, then you simply aren't understanding the passage as well as you think. It's the cold, harsh reality of the situation. If an extra 10-20 seconds in the passage will fix that, then spend it. But since you're already in the 2-5 range on the whole section, then adding or subtracting 20 seconds from your read probably isn't going to be the magic bullet you're hoping for. For whatever part of it that isn't a pure comprehension issue, odds are that you're just getting baited by the test writers, and no amount of time in the passage will fix that.
There's no secret. This plateau is like any other - you need to find the mistakes you're making, figure out how to not make them, and incorporate that new understanding into your test-taking.
1) Read passage once very fast, following each line with the tip of your pencil (not underlining).
2) On the first read, box names, dates, and terms that are defined. Also mark pivots ("however," "critics of this approach," "more recent investigation," "yet," etc.) with a ">" in the margin.
3) First read is all about what is being done (reading for reasoning structure). It's like drawing the outlines first before you color them in.
4) Second "read" (not really a full read): go through and identify what main points are, with very brief notations in the margins. Very brief "summaries" (hard to even call them this). This is like coloring in your outline.
This is all done in less than 3 minutes. Less is more (for me) when it comes to notation but I do find that jotting briefly helps to firm my grasp. Actually I do best when I focus in and own it, largely sans notations.
Sometimes, I simply miss on very tricky questions, and I almost always narrow those down to two choices. The answer is immediately apparent after realizing that my choice is incorrect. I wondered if spending more time on the passage would help, but I just came to a realization yesterday that I should probably be spending more time on the questions themselves. Time spent on each passage and its respective questions is usually no more than 8:30, with about a 7:45 average.
I think it comes exactly down to being "baited" as @"Jonathan Wang" noted, which as you mentioned won't be solved with added time. I'm getting better at catching things, but all of what you all are noting is extremely helpful. @Pacifico, I haven't actually organized my misses by question type, and that's something I will start doing immediately.
@nicole.hopkins You're method is very unique. I may give it a shot, especially since it might compartmentalize the general flow of the argument and do the same for the various points made in the passage. Remembering everything the passage has to offer may be easier this way.
Thanks, all! I'm feeling very strong about my future with RC.