I find it preposterous that i'm doing better in physical sciences than verbal review. I have never done less than 96%ile in a verbal standardized test (SAT, GRE). I know MCAT is different but this is crazy! Sometimes the answers just seem so out of left field. I also think that having done a lot of general reading really hurts me on this section, because I've studied philosophy and religion a lot and some of the passage conclusions are just WRONG! I've looked at the advice of EK, and others on the verbal section sticky, and I still can't get more than 11 on AAMC.
Any ideas, particularly for someone suffering from intrusion of outside knowledge. To give you an example, I just did the passage on Confucius in AAMC #3. The MCAT's conception of the main idea of "li" is really wrong! I specifically have taken a philosophy class that covered this.
I'm finding it hard to completely ignore what I know in order to take the test!!
PS I am also finding that, unlike most of the advice I've read on MCAT, going back to the passage and reading for detail is an necessary evil to do well on verbal section. The more I do these AAMC passages, the more I find that about half the questions require you to dig around for details. OK, maybe that's because I'm missing THE MAIN POINT sometimes but I don't think it's always the case.
Any ideas, particularly for someone suffering from intrusion of outside knowledge. To give you an example, I just did the passage on Confucius in AAMC #3. The MCAT's conception of the main idea of "li" is really wrong! I specifically have taken a philosophy class that covered this.
I'm finding it hard to completely ignore what I know in order to take the test!!
PS I am also finding that, unlike most of the advice I've read on MCAT, going back to the passage and reading for detail is an necessary evil to do well on verbal section. The more I do these AAMC passages, the more I find that about half the questions require you to dig around for details. OK, maybe that's because I'm missing THE MAIN POINT sometimes but I don't think it's always the case.