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mayonnai5e
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 1018
- Joined: Tue Dec 12, 2006 7:19 pm
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I have created a separate blog that describes my studies for the GMAT.
The blog is located here:
https://gmatmayonnai5e.blocked/
In this blog, I will primarily describe and detail my own strategies for attacking the different areas of the GMAT. For example, my second blog post will describe my lessons learned from reading comprehension and what things I have incorporated into my attack plan to counter my RC mistakes. Things that will be discussed include:
* how I structure my passage notes
* what to include in passage notes
* traps in the answer choices
* scope of the question and scope of the answers
These are not mind blowingly new ideas, but my blog will discuss things from a personal point of view instead of just general tactics as they are provided in the available sources found in books and in materials online.
Often, my attack strategies are adjusted as I discover new problems in my test taking. For example, when I first started studying for the math portion, I made many careless mistakes so I created a way to minimize my mistakes and incorporated this method in every math problem I did. The result was my ratio of careless errors to fundamental errors dropped significantly.
The blog is located here:
https://gmatmayonnai5e.blocked/
In this blog, I will primarily describe and detail my own strategies for attacking the different areas of the GMAT. For example, my second blog post will describe my lessons learned from reading comprehension and what things I have incorporated into my attack plan to counter my RC mistakes. Things that will be discussed include:
* how I structure my passage notes
* what to include in passage notes
* traps in the answer choices
* scope of the question and scope of the answers
These are not mind blowingly new ideas, but my blog will discuss things from a personal point of view instead of just general tactics as they are provided in the available sources found in books and in materials online.
Often, my attack strategies are adjusted as I discover new problems in my test taking. For example, when I first started studying for the math portion, I made many careless mistakes so I created a way to minimize my mistakes and incorporated this method in every math problem I did. The result was my ratio of careless errors to fundamental errors dropped significantly.
Last edited by mayonnai5e on Thu Aug 16, 2007 4:19 pm, edited 2 times in total.












