bubbliiiiiiii wrote:My schedule is to study for two hours during week days and to attempt a GMAT Prep during weekend.
how many days do you take *off*?
you MUST take at least one day per week -- preferably two, but at least one -- *off* studying.
this is a test of "lateral thinking" -- i.e., the kind of thinking that
connects different concepts and tests the
relationships between concepts, rather than testing things in a linear fashion.
the only time that the brain makes the requisite connections between concepts is when you take time off; if you try to study seven days per week, then you won't be able to think of things in a way that isn't perfectly logical and linear. that will spell bad news, especially on the verbal section (on which many of the problems are of types that are specifically designed *not* to be perfectly logical and linear).
My study material include - OG12, GMAC Supplements, BTG Forum and Manhattan SC guide (old one).
Currently going through the advanced concepts in Manhattan SC guide, 4th edition. (Just started today).
whatever you do, make sure that you don't try to learn *everything* with the same priority. (this is the default "software mentality" -- when you work with software, you have to treat every possible problem/bug as having the same importance, because basically *any* bug will mean that a program doesn't work.) there's waaaaayyyy too much information to keep in your conscious mind at once, so you have to choose certain topics to elevate over the others in terms of importance.
in other words,
you should concentrate on PRIORITIZING the different SC topics.
the BIG MISTAKE, on SC, is to try to look for EVERYTHING that you have ever seen in the problems/exercises, all at once.
this doesn't work -- it's a lot like trying to find all of the words in a word-search puzzle at once. if you've tried that, you'll know that it leads more often than not to finding nothing.
instead, you need to
have a short "priority list" of SC error types that you'll look for FIRST, and you need to relegate all other error types to lower "tiers" of this sort of hierarchical thinking.
in particular:
WHEN YOU READ THE PROMPT:
- look for the MEANING OF THE SENTENCE
- look for PARALLELISM
* FIRST * LOOK FOR THE FOLLOWING ERRORS in the answer choices:
- PRONOUNS
- MODIFIER PLACEMENT
- SUBJECT-VERB AGREEMENT
* THEN look for everything else.
think of the first-tier topics in the way you'd think about "triage" data (pulse, blood pressure, temperature) for an emergency patient at a hospital -- you ALWAYS collect the triage data first, and THEN think about everything else.
you should think about SC the same way -- if there are errors in the "triage" topics (parallelism, pronouns, modifier placement, SV agreement), then you should be finding those errors 100% of the time. if you are not finding these errors 100% of the time, then you should not move on to considering other error types until you can.
this is a "less is more" type of approach, but you should find that it throws the problems into much better focus.
I pratice reviewing every option of each question, irrespective of it being right or wrong so that I get more strategies to eliminate the wrong answers and pick the right one.
Moreover, I maintain a log of wrong questions and try to attempt them after a week from when I first practiced them.
you may want to wait longer than a week -- if you only wait a week, you'll probably still have a decently vivid memory of the problem and of the techniques that solve it.
Here, I would say mix and match of both. For idioms, I try to memorize them whereas for topics such as subject verb agreement, modifiers, pronoun references, comparisons I try to understand them and try to implement them during practice sessions.
this sounds good -- just make sure that you don't try to absorb all of the information with the same priority and/or try to look for all of it at once. you have to prioritize, as mentioned above.
Druing my entire study plan I have always tried to stay from non-official sources.
I am really stuck, as I am not able to recognize the flaw in my study pattern or thought process while answering questions. Sometimes, I feel may be I am trying too much and need a break for a couple of days! Don't know what to do. Please suggest.
wait, does this mean that you haven't EVER "taken a break for a couple of days"?
if so, then you need to put down the books for at least 1-2 weeks and do *nothing* for that time -- you need to give your brain the opportunity to build the necessary circuits for lateral thinking.
if you study 7 days per week, you will learn less than if you study 5 days per week.