Should you review answers that you got right?

<p>When taking practice tests, should you review answers you get right also? Sometimes I'm unsure of an answer but then I get it right, so should I review all of my correct answers or would it be a waste of time? Thanks.</p>

<p>Always review all of your answers</p>

<p>for the ones you guessed, look back to see why its right
for the ones you got right on your own, make sure you know exactly why its right, why you got it right, and how (technique)</p>

<p>It might be helpful to right down your observations</p>

<p>^^^^ = improved scores</p>

<p>Well, doesn't this suck up a whole lot of time? You will spend well over 1-2 hours just on 1 section... =P Some books (even Barron's 2400) don't provide good explanations anyways. They simply adumbrate some of their answers..</p>

<p>odds are you guessed on some of the ones you got right. (even if you reduced the number of possible answers). You want to review those. Also, the college board is great at putting in answers that look right but aren't, looking over your right answers and why the wrong answers are wrong will help you to identify those "trick answers".</p>

<p>Don't go over and redo every problem, that time's better spent doing another test, but revisit any problem that took you a long time and ask "how could I have done this faster?" and any problem you weren't 100% on and ask "why is each incorrect answer wrong, and is there a quick way to identify them as that?"</p>

<p>Make sure you carefully check the answer explanations for CB questions and tests. Regarding the other sources, I think, it, the experience of reading answer explanations, can be anywhere from moderately helpful to hazardously misleading.
I've seen, and am diurnally seeing, answer explanations on PR's 11 tests that lead to "overthinking" and would make one rethink and waste time before choosing an evidently true choice on the real tests.</p>

<p>just mark the questions that you are guessing on, and if you get those right, then go back and check those (yes even when you get them wrong:D)</p>