<p>When scoring a practice test, should you only look over the ones you got wrong or should you look over every single question?
Thanks.</p>
<p>when doing Practice Sets, mark the questions you weren't sure of. Then, when you review your answers, review those with the ones you got wrong.</p>
<p>Perfect! 10 char</p>
<p>review all of them.</p>
<p>every single question, not according to whether you got it right but rather, according to how difficult you found them. start with the difficult ones.</p>
<p>All of them.</p>
<p>^ You guys are such masochists :P</p>
<p>Review all of them in the beginning. But pay a lot of attention to the ones you missed and the ones you guessed on/weren't sure about.</p>
<p>After you feel pretty confident and you've taken a bunch of practice tests..I would lighten up a bit and just focus on the ones you missed/guessed (even if you got it right).</p>
<p>how do you go over the CR passage Q's though.....</p>
<p>You look at the right answer and figure out WHY they say it's the right answer.</p>
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when doing Practice Sets, mark the questions you weren't sure of.
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<p>Bad idea. Do that after the test. The last thing you need is more clutter in your brain while trying to do a practice test/section.</p>
<p>OP: Go over the ones you got wrong, the ones you guessed on, and the ones that you remember as being difficult. </p>
<p>The way I figured out which were "difficult" after having done the test (because let's face it, you're not going to be able to keep track of 170 questions) was by looking at my markings. For me: nothing crossed out = easy question, 4 answer choices crossed out = medium question, 2-3 answer choices crossed out = hard question (meaning there were 2 or 3 choices I liked), and 5 answer choices crossed out = very hard question.</p>
<p>well i always cross of regardelss of its difficulty. Look in the back of the test to see the E,M,H ratings next to each choice. It's a bit subjective for a few questions, but it's mostly accurate. Of course, it also depends on your own ability. For a below-average test taker, you might have to review a lot of the questions because even the ones marked E trip you up. The more advanced people can maybe get away with finding some of the H ones easy.</p>
<p>godfather, do you do all of your practice sets timed? because I don't and if feels very natural to mark the ones that I'm having trouble with. </p>
<p>Actually, even when I DO do a timed set I still mark the ones that I think are hard so that I can go back to those if I have time left over.</p>
<p>Yeah I just mark the ones I have trouble with..I do it during the actual test too, it just feels natural and it really doesnt take long. </p>
<p>I would do your practice tests timed for sure. Maybe not the first 2 if you're not familiar with the format and type of questions. But timed practice helps a lot..teaches you to manage your time so you don't make the mistake of getting bogged down on one question during the actual test.</p>