Hi minifox.
In verbal, you were strong overall, but for some reason, you had issues with the grammar aspect of SC.
Have you had trouble picking up on grammar issues when you've answered individual SC practice questions? If so, you could get better at seeing those issues by doing untimed SC practice using questions involving grammar issues such as subject-verb agreement issues, pronoun issues, flaws in sentences structure, and flaws in parallel structure.
In quant, your primary area of weakness is EQUAL/INEQUAL/ALG. To get stronger in that area, you could work on questions that require algebra and questions involving inequalities and absolute value. I think many of these questions will be Data Sufficiency questions.
Also, you could be stronger in general in quant. So, probably, you should go back through quant one topic at a time and do the following for each topic.
- Review the relevant concepts and strategies.
- Practice untimed until you achieve very high accuracy, such as Easy - close to 100%, Medium - 90%+, Hard - 70%+.
- Once you're achieving high accuracy untimed, work on speeding up to test pace.
You need to achieve those high levels of accuracy untimed to be strong in a topic. Lower accuracies may seem OK. However, when you achieve, for example, 75% accuracy in medium questions, you're still missing a pretty high proportion of questions and thus must have gaps in your knowledge or skillset that can keep you from achieving your quant score goal on test day.
Once you've taken those steps for a quant topic, move on to another topic and do the same thing.
For some more insights into how to practice for best results, see this post.
The Best GMAT Practice Methods _________________
Marty Murray | Chief Curriculum and Content Architect
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