The only reason I bring this alternative up is because I'm at the point where I get so few wrong that I almost force myself to circle way more than I need to.
... don't force yourself to circle more than you need to ... a strategy for a 'lighter circle' as a certain percentage (80 ... -100%) and a 'darker circle' as the range below that ...
... thought that the amount you circle should be equal to or ... , since you're supposed to circle anything you're not 100 ... reviewing ones you didn't circle.
Well for one, when doing logic games I would circle the correct answers and then after you've played that particular game transfer all the answers over to the scantron. For LR and RC I transfer over after every question.
Definitely circle answers on your test booklet. It may slow you down a few fractions of a second, but if you do mess up your bubbling, you can quickly go back and find where you got lost and correct the error.
... for LG, whether you should circle and move on.
From ... , if I get a "just circle it and move on" feeling ... each one quick to confirm, circle, and don't consider the ...
I BR everything, there are plenty of times I go back and run into questions I just moved on and forgot to circle or something, plus if you know the question well you will fly through reviewing it
I agree with @jdawg. I usually circle a couple words that make the question incorrect or if I'm really struggling between two answers I'll write out a short sentence as to why I think it's right/wrong.
What I do is always underline a sentence or circle a word that threw me off in the answer choices and made me not pick them. That way during blind review step 2 I know exactly why I didn't pick some answers and can tell if I made a mistake or not