To reach your target score, you'll need to systematically identify and strengthen your remaining weaknesses. The goal here isn’t to “do more questions” in a general sense; it’s to be intentional about WHERE you’re losing points, WHY you’re losing them, and WHAT you’re going to do to eliminate those issues.
A good place to start is by carefully reviewing your practice tests and study sessions to pinpoint exactly where you’re dropping points. Don’t just note the topics you missed. Look for patterns. Are the misses clustered around a few concepts? Are you making the same type of mistake across different questions? Are you losing points because of content gaps, poor strategy choices, timing issues, or execution errors?
For each weak area you identify, take a straightforward two-step approach:
First, deepen your understanding by thoroughly reviewing all related concepts, formulas, properties, strategies, and techniques. This should go beyond a quick refresher. You want the topic to feel organized in your mind: what the core rules are, how they interact, and what the test tends to ask you to do with them.
Second, reinforce your understanding with targeted practice by completing dozens of questions focused specifically on that topic. Topic-specific practice is what turns knowledge into performance. It helps you recognize common structures, spot shortcuts appropriately, and build speed as the topic becomes more familiar. Keep the practice focused until you’re consistently strong; random mixed sets are more useful later, once your foundation is solid.
Throughout this process, make reviewing your mistakes a standard part of every study session. That review is where the improvement actually happens. When you miss a question, take as long as you need to diagnose the cause by asking:
Was this a careless error? If so, what was the nature of it? (Misread a detail, dropped a negative, made an algebra slip, overlooked a constraint, rushed, etc.)
Did you apply the wrong formula, property, or strategy? If yes, what should you have used instead, and what clue in the question should have guided you to that approach?
Was there a concept you didn’t fully understand? If so, identify the exact concept and close that gap immediately before moving on.
Did you fall for a trap answer? If so, what was the specific trap and how can you avoid it next time? Trap answers are rarely random. They usually reflect a predictable mistake. If you can name the trap, you can prevent it.
This kind of structured error analysis is one of the most effective ways to efficiently improve your score, because it forces you to convert missed questions into specific, actionable fixes. Over time, that process steadily removes the main reasons you’re losing points, and that’s what drives meaningful, repeatable gains.
More here:
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