<p>I don't know how to plan reasonably..</p>
<p>So is this reasonable and doable: </p>
<p>day 1: take 5 sections of the test under untimed situation & read direct hits 1&2
day 2: take the other 4 (or 5 if the experimental is in it) & read direct hits 1&2
day 3: review all of my critical reading mistakes & read direct hits 1&2
day 4: review all of my math mistakes & read direct hits 1&2
day 5: review all of my writing mistakes & read direct hits 1&2</p>
<p>saturday & sunday is basically reviewing EVERYTHING in grammar and vocab</p>
<p>p.s. when I say "read direct hits 1&2" it's to read the wordlists at the end of the books</p>
<p>Is it survivable? Should I be more relaxed? More tougher? Thanks guys</p>
<p>Or should I just do this:</p>
<p>Day 1: Do all Math sections. Review. Read Direct Hits
Day 2: Do all critical reading sections. Review. Read Direct Hits
Day 3: Do all writing sections. Review. Read Direct Hits</p>
<p>Then Day 4: Work on my worst subjects</p>
<p>Repeat.</p>
<p>Which study plan is better?</p>
<p>Honestly, from all my studying experience no matter how well thought out you plan is for covering material you pretty much have to just see how things pan out and plan as you go. If you average around 6 to 7 hrs of studying a day with breaks every 2-3 hrs then you should be able to get everything you need to accomplished. The thing about studying is its impossible to plan a timeline on how you are going to study for something. The reason being is because some topics come easy and take less time than expected others will take much longer. Let me just justify that I know what I am talking about. I am an electrical engineering student. I’m entering my spring semester of sophomore year and my school is military. Not only do I deal with a military style school, but my academic curriculum is rigorous. I take 18-21 credits a semester. I have been able to keep a 3.0 gpa, which is pretty difficult to do considering I take up to 5 credits more per semester than some of the best ivy league engineering schools. I have attempted multiple times to make study plans and really there is nothing wrong with doing that just be prepared for them to change or fluctuate from the set plan. Sometimes everything will go as planned other times you’ll get some things done that you wanted to but you’ll come to a topic you struggle with and it will take you a very long time to finish, putting you off schedule. My advice is try to stick with your plan just know that its not going to completely go as planned and whether or not your trying to do too much at once will come to you naturally. You’ll know when you hit your limit and when you do some of the things I do so that I can refresh my mind are a 30 min nap, go for a walk outside, watch a 30 min tv show, get a snack with a big glass of ice water, and exercise. All of those will help you come back to studying as if its a new day.</p>
<p>I hope this helps you</p>