<p>3/4 hours per day during 2 months seems like too much. Only study that much if you feel 100% focused, or else it will turn out to be pointless.
Practice your weaknesses and you’ll reach any score.</p>
<p>Sure, why not. I went from 2150 to 2360, though it took a bit longer than two months. Instead of focusing on quantity, work on improving the quality of your study by studying specifically your weak points rather than what you’re good at.</p>
<p>Yea I think so. 3-4 hours seems a bit extreme, I would do like 2 hours. During the week or two before the test, I would start doing 3-4 hours. Also, I think luck plays a pretty big factor after 2100. If you gave a 2100 scorer the right test, then he could very likely score past 2200’s, and maybe, although not very likely, into the 2300’s.</p>
<p>Study by sections. There’s no need to do an entire exam every day, but if you work on the individual areas bit by bit until you reach the score you want, it’ll come together nicely when you do work an entire set. Also, two months is adequate time, but I would focus on improving your vocabulary for the sentence completions, grammar, and writing, as those things can be drastically improved in short periods of time.</p>
<p>I heard that doing a section or two each weekday and going over the answers should prove to be beneficial. (Especially if you have a lot of homework)</p>