StaceyKoprince Wrote:Have you ever gone back to old problems to see whether you can apply new takeaways? When you find a shortcut or have an insight, go back and see if you can find another past problem on which it would also apply. (It might not be an exact fit, but it might still give you some ideas.)
I've been doing just this and i'm finding an interesting trend. I'll mention below for the sake of clarity.
StaceyKoprince Wrote:Your steps sound good - and I understand the difference you're describing for Q vs. V. On Q, I'd focus more on asking yourself how you know to take a certain step / approach to a particular problem. When you find a shortcut, what should be the clue in future that you should apply this shortcut to some other problem? What kind of set-up do you need to see in order for this particular solution method to work again?
Also, what kind of set-up do you need to see to know you do NOT want to do a problem? A roman numeral inequality with 4 variables and an absolute value tossed in? See ya. I'm outta here. :)
It's interesting -- my score doesn't represent it but on Q, i've internalized most of this and I can just do the problem without even thinking. If I see a NP/Distance/Geo -- I know exactly what I need to do.
One area that i'm struggling A LOT on is word problems. I've been taking my time to get organized and setup on word problems and before I know it -- 2+ minutes are already up and I just decide to move on. I'm debating if my time is well served by doing countless long word problems to speed up the process or just notice this shortcoming and skip them the minute I see them. What do you suggest?
StaceyKoprince Wrote:From your earlier post, when you re-do a problem that you thought you learned but then miss it later, why does that tend to happen? Is it because you weren't sure what they were testing? Because you coudln't come up with a plan / solution method? Because you messed up the actual execution? Where does it go wrong?
This is an interesting question -- if I miss make a mistake on a problem that I "thought" I had tackled -- it's usually because I rush to make the sub 2minute mark. I know that I don't need to hit below 2 minutes on every problem but this is usually the trend -- this is especially true for long word problems.
In NP -- I tend to make a careless mistake (didn't check negative etc.). I'm trying to apply the above principles to get deeper so i'm hoping that helps.
In Geometry -- although I know the necessary rules like the back of my hand, I can't seem to APPLY those rules on a complicated issue.
This seems to be multiplied on SC -- I seem to KNOW why the problem was wrong at the time of reviewing it but I am having a really hard time on
carrying that lesson over to other problems. Meaning, i'll get the same problem right upon re-review, probably 75% of the time but I don't know how to translate that issue to OTHER problems. How do I tackle this?
To answer your question -- in SC specifically, it's because I don't know what they are testing. Did I miss a SV test because of all the fluff in the middle etc. This is probably the case 50% of the time. The other 50% of the time, it's because of modifiers/parallelism. I'm talking about the 700ish level type of problems. I know that they might be testing a "-ing" or an overall sentence parallelism but i'll get bogged down with that stuff. How should I tackle this?
I'll give an example for to clarify my question(I know that I can't post OG questions here, so I won't post the answer choices) this is more so to get my point across. I hope it's not a problem. If it ease, please feel free to edit and delete that part.
Q: "
Trying to find the reason for a discrepancy in the records, he found that the files had been tampered with"
A) - Above underlined
C) - As he was trying ...., he
I picked C because it sounded right. I guess the issue here is meaning but I thought that the form was " As [x], [y]" sounded right. The problem is -- what is the takeaway here? I would say that the takeaway is "meaning" -- does that mean that meaning wins over idioms? This rather abstract takeaway is what's causing the problem in SC.
another example:
Q) "The first time that Larry walked down the ramp, laden with packages" or
"The first time that Larry, laden with packages, walked down the ramp"
I picked the former, which was wrong. I know that modifiers should be placed as close to what they are modifying as possible -- I know this rule very well but I didn't apply it. What does that say? Is it now knowing what the problem is testing?
Thanks again for the detailed thought process!