<p>so after you've taken them and are ready to see why you got the questions right or wrong.. I feel that takes more time than even taking a test. How do I expedite this process and still get a lot out of it? Xiggi method</p>
<p>Well, you did ask what you could do for SAT prep…</p>
<p>I don’t understand why you’d even want to go through practice tests quickly, when you can learn so much more and get more out of it through closely examining everything.</p>
<p>but i think I take more time than I do actually answering the questions to go over them. I just wanna be more efficient and go over more. How do I make it a lil faster but still get the benefit?</p>
<p>Hmmm… I still see nothing wrong with taking more time going over the test than answering. Maybe you’re not taking enough time to answer the questions!</p>
<p>Unless you’re confident that you don’t need to go over every question in a section, go over every question in each section.</p>
<p>Why did you pick the answer you did?
Why is your answer wrong?
Why are the other answer choices wrong?
Why is the correct answer correct?
What can I do next time?
What types of problems do I generally mess up on? Main idea? Inferences? Vocabulary? Sentence-verb agreement? Geometry? Or is it a bit of each?</p>
<p>This takes a long time, especially for the reading passages. If you don’t answer all 4 questions, you won’t get the most out of it. </p>
<p>I think that the more you do this, the faster it’ll go, but that’s just a thought; I haven’t tested it out yet.</p>
<p>You improve by finding out what you did wrong and trying not to make the same mistake again! There’s no way around it.</p>
<p>I would continue going at a slow pace. Answer the questions above. Find out what you did wrong and try not to make the same mistake on the next practice test. See if you can improve.</p>
<p>At first it takes some time, but you’ll unconsciously start building up patterns and the next time you see the same question you won’t spend that much time.</p>
<p>To build patterns, however, you’ll need to scrutinize. Don’t just read the questions, think about them and how they are built.</p>
<p>It took me around 3 hours to study the first tests but, as I said, one gets very fast at it, provided that one is truly concentrating.</p>