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Recently there have been many posts relating to how hard QR is and how people have done so poorly on it. I have gotten a lot of pm's relating to QR so i'm just gonna try and compile it into this thread. I am confident that everyone here has the ability to do phenomenally on QR if they just spend a little time on it. I have read many times from people who scored poorly on their QR section and the reasoning for it was "i didn't really study for it". This i completely don't understand because right above, they would have solid science scores because they studied months for that. Quick peice of advice, it takes so so so much less effort to raise your QR score by 5+ than it would be for any other section on the DAT. I'm quite confident that if you just spend maybe 2 weeks learning the tricks of QR, then your AA will get a nice boost instead of getting dragged down.
First and most important thing to consider when dealing with QR is of course, timing. Timing is just something you need to get used to. If your anything like me, you haven't had to do quick mental math since freshmen year of highschool because of our trusty TI's. It just gets down to practice. At the start of summer, i had trouble finishing the test. I started out with about 5-6 that i couldn't get to. By the end of summer, i got it to where i had about 3-4 minutes to check over stuff. Now don't think i spent the entire summer practicing it, i probably spent a total of 2 weeks doing 1 practice section a day until my speed caught up.
Also another thing to always have in your mind is that the question is never that time consuming. The people that designed this test didn't want us sitting there trying to prove theorems. If your taking too long on a problem, you probably missed the potential shortcuts. EX. if a right triangle has ridiculously weird/high value sides and they want you to figure for a third, then it's probably a 3-4-5 triangle or a 5-12-13 triangle. Don't pythagorean theorom out ridiculous numbers (that would take ages). Learn shortcuts and tricks. The rabbit wasn't so silly afterall. Tricks AREN'T just for kids.😛
Finally, everyone knows the math section of the DAT is the last section and yet no one thinks to prepare for it under the same rigorous conditions. When they get to the actual test, they wonder why the scores are so much lower than the practice ones they did before. Well it's because after 3 hours of stressed out test taking, your brain is fried. To prepare your brain for this, study quant after you've already put in a couple hours of studying for other subjects. Don't practice it when your fresh and ready to take on the world because during the actual exam, you won't be, trust me.
These are just a few simple peices of advice that i think could benefit some of you out there. It is an absolute shame when i see someone with science scores of 20's and 21's and then have their otherwise 20 AA be dragged down to a 19 or even 18 by a quant score of 15. Study smart and there's no reason why everyone shouldn't be able to kill that section.
First and most important thing to consider when dealing with QR is of course, timing. Timing is just something you need to get used to. If your anything like me, you haven't had to do quick mental math since freshmen year of highschool because of our trusty TI's. It just gets down to practice. At the start of summer, i had trouble finishing the test. I started out with about 5-6 that i couldn't get to. By the end of summer, i got it to where i had about 3-4 minutes to check over stuff. Now don't think i spent the entire summer practicing it, i probably spent a total of 2 weeks doing 1 practice section a day until my speed caught up.
Also another thing to always have in your mind is that the question is never that time consuming. The people that designed this test didn't want us sitting there trying to prove theorems. If your taking too long on a problem, you probably missed the potential shortcuts. EX. if a right triangle has ridiculously weird/high value sides and they want you to figure for a third, then it's probably a 3-4-5 triangle or a 5-12-13 triangle. Don't pythagorean theorom out ridiculous numbers (that would take ages). Learn shortcuts and tricks. The rabbit wasn't so silly afterall. Tricks AREN'T just for kids.😛
Finally, everyone knows the math section of the DAT is the last section and yet no one thinks to prepare for it under the same rigorous conditions. When they get to the actual test, they wonder why the scores are so much lower than the practice ones they did before. Well it's because after 3 hours of stressed out test taking, your brain is fried. To prepare your brain for this, study quant after you've already put in a couple hours of studying for other subjects. Don't practice it when your fresh and ready to take on the world because during the actual exam, you won't be, trust me.
These are just a few simple peices of advice that i think could benefit some of you out there. It is an absolute shame when i see someone with science scores of 20's and 21's and then have their otherwise 20 AA be dragged down to a 19 or even 18 by a quant score of 15. Study smart and there's no reason why everyone shouldn't be able to kill that section.