I just had a very poor performance on a PT. I missed 3/4 LR questions because I did not know them no excuses. BUT I missed another 7!!! Because I misread something in the stimulus or did not correctly read it. How should I interpret this? I am at a point where I feel that I could go perfect majority of the time because I truly do know the test, however this PT score hurts. What should I do here?

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5 comments

  • Wednesday, Nov 25 2015

    If it's just one PT where this happened, perhaps you were tired and didn't focus as you should have. I wouldn't worry much about it unless it's a pattern. I found that I stopped "misreading" when I stopped PTing in noisy cafes.

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  • Tuesday, Nov 24 2015

    @2543.janson35 I would chalk up 7 mistakes as 7 times the test writers got the best of you before interpreting them as misreads.

    +10!!

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  • Tuesday, Nov 24 2015

    "Misreading" isn't an accident, especially not 7 times. It may feel as if all you did was miss a word, but in reality there was a small lapse in your understanding. Maybe this was caused by a lack of concentration, or maybe it was caused by skills that aren't exactly where you think they are. Either way, keep practicing. The way that the test is written is tricky many times, and purposefully so. I would chalk up 7 mistakes as 7 times the test writers got the best of you before interpreting them as misreads. I've been there before! You just have to keep at it; eventually, with enough practice, you'll see that the amount of times you "misread" will drop substantially, and when this happens, you'll be able to see the difference between your skills then and now.

    Good luck!

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  • Tuesday, Nov 24 2015

    @tanes25413 if you notice that you have lots of time remaining before time is up, then you might try slowing down just a tad. Do you know approximately how much time you're spending on questions? Of course this will vary from test to test, but it might be worth checking into if you're missing so many from misreading. Do your timed tests or your BR scores indicate that you go -0? If just BR, then that probably means you should slow down. Was this score totally off from the others?

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  • Tuesday, Nov 24 2015

    I'm not an expert but you may be rushing, and the times when I read at a normal pace rather than skimming, look at each modifier and notice each change in term use - all that helps. I think slowing down might help you a lot since you already have the material down (hopefully other experts will give their insight as well)

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