Hello, Ravi. Apologies for getting to this later than I would have liked to, but I am still catching up after a power outage in my area that lasted more than a day. I have crossed paths with you in the forum quite a bit, so I feel I have some insight into how you have been practicing. My advice falls in line with what Rich said earlier about review: spend more time understanding what makes the wrong answers incorrect, particularly in Verbal. And play a little game with yourself when it comes to practice. Either hit certain benchmarks for accuracy at a certain level of difficulty or stay at that level. Start with Easy (humble yourself... Easy questions are not to be taken for granted) and take on just five questions of, say, CR. If you hit five out of five, then
the next day, you can allow yourself to graduate to a Medium set, where you are allowed to miss one question to graduate in subsequent practice to Hard for that question type. Sure, you can practice just
boldface CR, or weaken or strengthen questions, and so on, but unless you have a definite weakness with a certain question type, you can mix them up to keep your practice more stimulating. When you miss a question, STOP. That is, once you have completed the set, go back and research what makes that question tick. Look it up on the forum and read over posts until you find one or a few that resonate with you. If there are none, then request an Expert reply. The biggest mistakes I see people make concerning Verbal practice are blitzing through questions, in hopes of achieving mastery through exposure, and looking over those they have missed only as deep as skimming the OE for the
correct answer and, possibly, the wrong answer they chose. This kind of study is nonproductive, and you will keep making the same mistakes. I like to say that if you do what you have always done, you will get what you have always gotten. More questions are not the answer. Review and tightly controlled practice can lead to major shifts in understanding.
Regarding Quant, you can read through either index posted by
Bunuel in his signature: the Megathread or All You Need. Both are excellent places to start to brush up on fundamentals. Of course, you are also welcome to try any of the various online learning modules, which I think can help students more on the Quant side by progressing through concepts one by one. Again, you will have to take the time to understand why you are missing questions, and you had better be paying attention to your accuracy across
official Easy, Medium, and Hard questions, or you can easily waste a lot of time wading through a sea of random questions before picking up on any helpful trends. Are you making careless mistakes when you understand the concept? Do you have trouble with a certain topic? Is the phrasing of a question or a vital piece of information throwing you off? You have to get to the bottom of what is causing you to miss any question you miss in order to understand how to fix that issue.
That is where I would start if I were you. By coaching students in the manner I have outlined above, I have seen some major turnarounds. Remember to treat each question as an opportunity to learn, not as a way to inflate your ego. Leave those Hard questions alone until you have earned the right to lay eyes on them. Your score will increase beyond 700 in no time if you get your performance in order on Easy and Medium questions, trust me.
Good luck.
- Andrew