I'm just wondering how I should study for RC?
Obviously Blind Review, but how much time should I spend going back and trying to figure out why my wrong answers were wrong? 99% of the time I can get the right answer. That's not difficult. It's doing it in the time constraint.
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I hate posting stupid questions, so I was hesitant to post this, but RC is so stressful for me. I'm O.K. going -7 because my LR and LG scores are so good. But I can't go -14. That's ridiculous
I feel like studying for RC is really, really, really hard.
This will take a couple of weeks, but part of it is just getting a ton of questions under your belt, so finding the patterns in the questions and building up speed becomes natural.
But I did just bomb my last RC, so....
I take a time RC section, then BR, but is BR even helpful for RC? Because my difficulty is not getting the question correct. It's getting the question correct within the time frame. Once I go back to BR my answers, I'm going to get ALL of them correct. No question there. Because of this, I don't think my issue is understanding why the right answer is right and the wrong answer wrong, it's doing it in the time frame required.
So how should I tackle this? Should I even BR? Because I feel like I'm wasting time BRing since I'm going to get them all right if I BR anyways! BR is supposed to help you understand why right answers are right and wrong answers are wrong. If I'm able to do that, but just not in the time frame....then what?
I don't know if I'm explaining myself properly here...
I mean normally in LR I think I use a combination of elimination and inductive reasoning. I'll eliminate 2 to 3 answer choices via process of elimination and then between the remaining answer choices, 1 will stand out.
I also noticed I was getting some questions wrong because of the slightest word difference in the answer choices, like maybe the one I picked was wrong because it was too strong, this happened in br. I'm still drilling, so i'm no expert, but I've improved by understanding my good and bad habits when I take a timed section.
PS, don't feel bad about posting questions, we have to help each other.
Time yourself. You should allow yourself 8:45 tops. However, do not use a countdown timer, use a stop watch so that you can see how much time you're spending per passage. Once you've got a good grip on RC, start using a countdown timer and watch so that you force yourself not to spend too much time on any one question/the passage.
It's worth noting that you'll likely spend less time on passages that discuss topics that you're comfortable with (for me, those often include hard science and psychology). Try to give yourself less time on these passages - maybe 8:00 or less.
Do NOT give yourself more time on passages that are more difficult for you.
Post-PT:
BR like you would LR. Read the question that you circled, and spend more time using the passage to answer the question.
In general:
Just drill the heck out of RC passages. Make sure to expose yourself to as many passages as your brain can handle.
What is the Argument Structure of the passage?
Does it follow a similar template that I have seen before and should start to more quickly recognize? i.e. Is a phenomenon presented, followed by a hypothesis - then what is the Author's stance on the hypothesis... Almost all of the passages can be broken down in a similar way that we approach LG - i.e. (and not literally) sequencing game ~ phenomenon/hypothesis argument structure.
Other points I try to address: How could I have been more effective during the initial reading of the passage? Too mired in details, allowing myself to fall into time sucks on highly convoluted language instead of getting a general grasp of the concept and then know where to return if a detailed/local question is asked?
I agree with @MrSamIam on using a stopwatch to time during drilling. I have definitely found that spending a little more time upfront reading the passage has made an impact on how many more questions I can answer without having to refer back to the passage. For local questions, I will POE the obvious wrong answer choices and then refer back to passage to confirm answer. For the harder curve type questions, I will definitely spend more time reviewing those during BR.
It has been extremely helpful for me to drill the early RC's just to recognize patterns. I have done about half of them. After I finish another round of LG, then I will return to the rest of the early RC's and then retake the RC's from my previous PT's hopefully allowing a little extra time between exposure of the original take.
Hope this helps:)