Now, when you say "Strong" i assume that you have atleast an 85% accuracy in CR??
Are you an engineer? Q-48 is par for course so at 44, you are well below. Thats your new target. Atleast Q-48.
RC can be a gift. You are in India. See if you can get your hands on the TIME material for RC, specifically their RC book. Last i saw, they had a good lay-out of how to increase your reading speed. 3months time-- work on it. And yeah OG-11 all the way it is.
You can do the SCG a hundred times and if your accuracy still isn't 95% you've missed something. That book is THE BOOK for SC, so if you know it front to back, SC should be a walk in the park.
Saying "
I DON"T KNOW!!
is the worst answer you can give me. You DO NOT leave anything to chance. Go back, look at the test and analyse WHY you have that score. Where did you go wrong and WHY? is CR still a strong area or does the test say differently?? Do you have an error tracker?
If you dont want to do OG-11, try the OG-12
I agree with Jim, not more than 3hours a day. But how you spend that 3hours is important. How many days do you need to cover the basics of each topic? If your Q is strong, you probably need an hour to revise the basics. After this, on your error tracker, write down 40 Qs pertaining to that topic from OG-__ i.e if you are doing Geometry, then the OG Qs are 1,7,8,12,... and so on. Solve these Qs in the next 75mins. The error-tracker is pretty comprehensive so follow it to the T.
At the end, check your answers and write the score.
Go take a walk for a few mins.
When you return, look at the Qs you got wrong. Was it an easy Q or hard Q? Did you make a silly mistake or did you genuinely not know the concept? Can you solve it now to get the correct answer? Can you think of a differnt way of solving it? Does your method match the one given in the answer solution or is yours easier? If yours is more complicated, why didnt you think of the easier answer? If the OG answer is easier, is there a new concept involved that you dont know about? Why do you not know the concept?
File paper and repeat process for another section.
Apply similar process to every test you take.
Edit: Sorry if i sound demanding, but i find that pushing a person to achieve more than they think they can often produces better results. Feel free to tell me if i am too demanding though
