Hello 7sagers,
I'm currently finished with the curriculum and have taken 15 PTs with BR and I've plateaued around 157 with my BR as high as 171. One issue I have is the lack of ability to predict one or multiple predictions, or even a general prediction before I reach the answer choices. I want to be able to predict the right answer choice and then be able to find the one I predicted and have it right there glaring in the answer choice.
I noticed reading the stimulus SLOWER has made it slightly easier to predict answers because reading it slower made it easier to grasp the understanding of the stimulus, but more times than not, I still can't predict answers the way I should be.
I've drilled almost all of the Cambridge sets and now just drilling practice LR sections. My goal is a 161 and I'm currently enrolled for the October exam. Any thoughts?
Comments
For many questions, especially the toughest ones, I think it's very hard to consistently and reliably predict answer choices (so I've found).
For these questions, I think using process of elimination in your best bet. Just envision J.Y.'s voice, like in the lessons, and efficiently analyze each answer choice and why it could be right or wrong. Often you'll be able to immediately get rid of 2 or even 3.
Additionally, it's crucial to have a grasp of what the premise(s) and conclusion(s) of an argument are; these will guide you in your task of eliminating clearly wrong or slightly out of scope answers.
Good luck in October!
I'm just hesitant to the idea of a "prediction," because it really did feel more like an intuition to me. For example, when I would read an NA question, most of the time I really couldn't tell you what the right answer might look like until I saw the answer choices. In fact, that was true for a lot of question types.
OP's experience may be different but I just want to let him know that it isn't a skill necessary to do well on this exam. Personally, I found more value in the skill of identifying wrong answer choices than in making predictions about what the right one would be.
And I've also found that the tougher NA are definitely ones that you don't prephrase and that you just know the right answer is correct when you read it. But if you don't have this intuition built up then it may take a little work to get it there. I'm just wary of telling people to rely on intuition because if it's a skill they don't have built up yet then it can be incredibly frustrating, and so I think articulating flaws and predicting/having an idea of what you're looking for--even if you're not correct in your prediction--can really help overcome this frustration.
Thank you so much for the tidbits. I totally agree that intuition will take time. As long as I'm in the ballpark, it's a good start for me. Just got to keep on drilling and building that intuition. Thanks guys