When I do the SA quizzes, I do exceptionally well. Actually, I have gotten all of the problems correct. However, when it comes to actually doing the SA problems on the test, I have a hard time transcribing the majority of the SA problems.

Can someone please give me advice on how to overcome this.

Very frustrated!!!

Admin note: Please don't post your title in all caps.

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5 comments

  • Thursday, Dec 10 2015

    @wraith985-4026 "oh, I should have seen that" does not constitute understanding

    YES!

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  • Thursday, Dec 10 2015

    @wraith985-4026 sounds an awful lot like "you can find the assumption by finding the assumption" :D

    not exactly what I meant haha

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  • Thursday, Dec 10 2015

    There is no magic advice. The mechanic of SA doesn't change from question to question. That means you're either (1) not understanding the words on the page, or (2) getting psyched out by test conditions. If you're getting them in practice, odds are it leans toward #2, but you must address both because they are intertwined factors (stress does funny things to your thought processes, and since you'll never be without stress you'd better learn how to catch yourself).

    You need to understand what percentage of your struggles comes from each. Deal with the former by understanding what you failed to see and WHY it tripped you up ("oh, I should have seen that" does not constitute understanding), and deal with the latter by finding a way to not get so worked up while under test conditions.

    @kennedybj959 "just find the conclusion and premises and then see what's missing" sounds an awful lot like "you can find the assumption by finding the assumption" :D

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  • Thursday, Dec 10 2015

    I'd just find the conclusion and the premises and then see what is missing

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  • Thursday, Dec 10 2015

    For me personally, I don't really transcribe assumption questions on the test. I just look for the gap.

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