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In Episode 7 of our GMAT Ninja CR series, we are rounding up the oddballs, the misfits, and the format-benders: EXCEPT, Fill-In-The-Blanks, and other unusual Critical Reasoning question types. When you see a question that ends with a literal blank line
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Say the stem says: x and y are both integers. Even if I write it at the top of the page - I always forget to refer back to it when I solve DS questions (because I'm in a rush, obviously I forget). And often this is key to choosing among some of the answer choices.
I was wondering if anyone had any cool strategies to not miss these kind of bells and whistles? do you write them next to the equations or just on top? Or something else?
Thanks!
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Would suggest writing such information at the beginning of the solution area and circle it or underline it. Moreover, once you practice a lot of DS questions this kind of information would naturally stick in your mind.
Writing and summarizing the key points in the beginning and reading the question several times are the two main ways one can internalize the details in a data sufficiency question.
If this is a recurring issue, then perhaps repeating prior to attempting each statement may also be a good idea, but it will cost you time. Really it is a trade off between speed and accuracy.
Cheers, Dabral
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