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ahmarHASSAN
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ahmarHASSAN
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Yeah any specific suggestions regarding resources. I used the OG Tests and GMAT club test and quizzes for preparation.
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Hi, I need to increase my Verbal and DI scores. Would really appreciate any suggestions

Which types of questions/issues do you feel are holding you back? For assumption questions, for example, the negation technique could be helpful to leverage. For DI, creating quick info maps may also help a bit in certain situations.

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Hi ahmarHASSAN
It's good that you have assessed yourself. You are at a juncture from where significant efforts result in marginal improvement therefore it's important that you direct your efforts and energy in the right direction with great focus on which areas can you improve that are aligned with your competence.

I suggest that you should start looking whether you need more help with CR or RC

Likewise you need to check which type of DI questions are under your comfort zone yet the accuracy is not as good.

More detailed analysis of sectional perfomance would be able to help us find answer to the questions that I have posed.

Post more detailed analysis and tag me and I will be happy to share with you my assessment and suggestion.
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@GMATinsight

These are the DI and Verbal details.




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Try to double click on the sectional scores to understand what areas are pulling the overall sectional scores down. You should start there.

In verbal, it's not always CR and RC, but the underlying concepts being tested. So, focus on these areas and practice both RC and CR as applicable.
ahmarHASSAN

Hi, I need to increase my Verbal and DI scores. Would really appreciate any suggestions
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Gmat750aspirant
You need to improve DI and Verbal

To increase your verbal score, you must identify your exact weaknesses, fill in any knowledge gaps, and strengthen your skills. The overall process will be to find weaker areas, learn all about how to answer questions of types that you aren't that comfortable with now, and do dozens of practice questions category by category, basically driving your score up point by point.

For example, assume you begin studying Critical Reasoning. Your first goal is to master the individual Critical Reasoning topics: Strengthen the Argument, Weaken the Argument, Resolve the Paradox, etc. As you go through the questions, do a thorough analysis of each question that you don't get correct. If you missed a Weaken question, ask yourself why you didn't get it right. Did you make a careless mistake? Did you not recognize what the question was asking? Did you skip over a key detail in an answer choice? Getting GMAT verbal questions right is a matter of what you know, what you see, and what you do. So, any time that you don't get one right, you can seek to identify what you would have had to know in order to get the right answer, what you had to see that you didn't see, and what you could have done differently to arrive at the correct answer.

Regarding RC, when students get those questions wrong, it’s partly because they don't truly understand what they have just read. To understand what you are reading, you may have to slow down even more (for now) in order to eventually speed up. You have to learn to comprehend what you read, keep it all straight, and use what you are reading to arrive at correct answers.

At this point, your best bet is to focus on getting the correct answers to questions, taking **as much time as you need** to see key details and understand the logic of what you are reading. If you don't understand something, go back and read it one sentence at a time, even one word at a time, not moving on until you understand what you have just read. There is no way around this work. Your goal should be to take all the time you need to understand exactly what is being said and arrive at the correct answer. If you can learn to get answers taking your time, you can learn to speed up. Answering questions is like any task: The more times you do it carefully and successfully, the faster you become at doing it carefully and successfully.

Another component to understanding what you are reading is being “present” when reading. Don’t worry about how things are going at work, or what you will eat for dinner, or even how long you’re taking to read through the passage. Just focus on what is in front of you, word by word, line by line. Furthermore, try to make reading fun. For example, even if you are reading about a topic that bores you, pretend that you are the person making the argument. By doing so, you will make the passage more relatable to YOU, and ultimately you should be able to read with greater focus.

One final component of Reading Comprehension that may be tripping you up is that RC questions contain one or more trap answers that seem to answer the question but don't really. So, a key part of training to correctly answer RC questions is learning to notice the differences between trap answers and correct answers. You have to learn to see how trap answers seem to follow from what the passages say, but don't really, while correct answers fit what the passages say exactly. Of course, the better you become at noticing the differences between trap answer choices and correct answers, the faster you will answer RC questions.

Here is also a great article that you can check out:

How to Score High on GMAT Verbal on the Focus Edition
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