rewingcpa wrote:
Should I spend most of my time in the next 9 days focusing on my weakest areas? If so, would it be best to spend most of my time reviewing the Strategy guides or going over OG questions? What is the best way to maintain what I have already learned?
you should spend
some time reviewing weak areas, but not
too much time.
remember the lesson from class #9 (the last session) of your online course:
when you get close to test day, you want to transition from
studying weak areas to
planning timing.
in other words:
if you're within a week of test day, you probably won't be able to effect much more improvement on your weak areas - especially if they're areas on which you've already worked a lot but that are resistant to change.
but what you
can do is PLAN YOUR TIMING AHEAD OF TIME.
you should note the areas on which you've had better and worse performances, and areas on which you've spent more and less time.
you should plan to move time
away from the areas on which you've struggled, and
toward the areas on which you've done a better job. (if you're familiar with basic economic theory, this is the principle of "comparative advantage" at work.)
you may want to watch class #9 again - the recordings are available 24/7 - to revisit the concept of planning timing.
the whole point of the lesson entitled "preparing to face the gmat" in that class session is that, once the test draws close enough, you should STOP trying to improve resistant weak areas and move your focus to making optimal timing trade-offs.
if your test is only nine days away, "maintain[ing] what you've already learned" should not be an issue.
good luck!