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I wanted to share a strategy that's been working for me.
When I do BR, my question isn't "am I comfortable with this question?". My question is rather, "did I tackle this question in the most efficient way possible?" Because in a lot of cases, I might be comfortable with a question, have gotten it right, but have spent way more time than needed. Also, there's usually a reason why I spent more time than needed: I might be lacking some crucial skills.
I time myself not just the overall time spent on a section, but the time I took for each question. If I thought a question was easy, but spent over 1:25+, I didn't solve that question as efficiently as possible. If the reason, for example, is because I didn't identify the conclusion in the most precise way and had to go back to the stimulus, that tells me that I still need to work on identifying the conclusion precisely. I need to improve on that skill.
So here's what I do.
Repeat
I think this helps me to
GRANTED, there are still some questions that I have absolutely NO IDEA about even after BR.
Those require the most analysis.
But usually my actual and BR scores are pretty similar.
FYI tho, this strategy takes A LONG TIME in the beginning. Sometimes I take 3~4 hours BRing a single section. But I think it's worth it.
Comments
thanks for sharing, @TheoryandPractice!
Thanks for sharing @TheoryandPractice. You are asking all the right questions and I ask the same ones for myself. Thank you for writing it down for all of us
Yeah, this is a great BR methodology. We can't find the right answers until we ask the right questions. It's this level of depth that we've really got to get into if we want to perform at a high level and close the gap between timed and BR test scores.
This is superb! Thank you for sharing your methodology!! ...bookmarking for sure!...
Question: how do you time per question easily?
Use any phone/ ipod touch and go to stopwatch. Press start and after each question, press "lap." That will keep track of both the time spent on each Q and the overall time spent
I do exactly the same thing, with one addition:
- I use the analog stopwatch instead of the digital stopwatch (swipe left to see that face). The "lap" feature is the same in either face.
- There is a 30 minute "interior" timer which helps overall (yes, I'm trying to get my section time down to 30 minutes), plus there is a digital total time below the 30 minute timer as well (which I try to ignore).
I do this so I get used to the analog clock face & hands, since that's all we can have in the real test.
I've changed all my digital clocks to analog faces for the purpose of getting used to it before real test time. I'm a nerd.
Thanks for sharing @TheoryandPractice ! I'm definitely going to incorporate this into my practice.
@ScooterMinion i will also be adopting your timing approach. I think it's helpful to recreate test day conditions as much as possible. Thanks for sharing!
Just a note, you can find the analog stopwatch in Apple's Clock app only if you're using iOS 10. For those with Apple devices that are too old to be updated to iOS 10 (like me ), there are other analog stopwatch apps out there, such as these: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/classic-stopwatch-virtual-mechanical-chronometer-analog/id622509131?mt=8
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/stopwatch-plus-best-fitness-time-tracking-watch/id556070101?mt=8
If you're an Android user, this app might work for you: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=goroblockapps.com.stopwatch1
Dude...this has already helped times a million. I look at it before every RC now. Thank you so so much!