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Hi, this might be the post you need: the-ultimate-q51-guide-209801.html#p1613600 Personally, I do need see the necessity for deep theory knowledge for hard problems. I guess, such problems are more about thinking and experience: the more you solve them, the more possible ways to solve one come to your brain automatically
_______________________ Please drop me some kudos, if you find my ans useful :tongue_opt2
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Hi, this might be the post you need: https://gmatclub.com/forum/the-ultimate ... l#p1613600 Personally, I do need see the necessity for deep theory knowledge for hard problems. I guess, such problems are more about thinking and experience: the more you solve them, the more possible ways to solve one come to your brain automatically
_______________________ Please drop me some kudos, if you find my ans useful
Any tip on how to solve hard questions (700+) on quant within 2 mins? Dear fellows,
I'm experiencing difficulties on hard quant questions. I'm quite comfortable in easy and medium question in most cases (70-80% accuracy), however when it comes to hard questions I get stuck and this makes me nervous. In fact, in high school math was favorite and strong side. Now, I feel like I don't know all the theory. Thus, can someone kindly provide a link that contains all the theory that is needed to score Q51? Also is there something special I must do to score Q51 in quant?
Thanks and happy learning:)
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My advice: 1- make sure you can solve easy at 95% accuracy and medium at 85% accuracy (at least) 2- Hard questions are meant to take more than 2 min (till 3.5 min in some cases). so you should be able to solve easy and medium questions at much less than 2 min. 3- Use GMATclub question-bank extensively. Don't worry if you can't solve some of the hard ones. The good news is always that you knew the idea. 4- Use the error log to record the hard ones that took too much time or you got wrong so that you can come back to it later. 5- Many questions in the Question bank are too hard to be GMAT. Avoid questions of unknown sources (usually tagged: please specify). 6- Finish the official guide questions first, then jump to sources such as Veritas - Math revolution - GMATprepnow - Manhattan (I put Manhattan in the last place because I found many questions too tedious or time consuming with less smart ideas) 7- Don't compare yourself with others 8- Focus on practice more than theory. For every question there is lots of shortcuts and theories. Although these theories may save you time, but too much theories would be too confusing and too hard to memorize. GMAT is not testing how much theories do you know.
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