No actual scratch paper, unless you're taking a digitally-offered exam, in which case they do give people scratch paper. For the paper exam, you'll have plenty of space to work because they added more paper to the test booklets in recent exams.
For these 8 missed questions, how long do you spend on each one as opposed to the ones you got correct? What are the difficulty levels on them? Were you down to 2-3 choices?
@"paulmv.benthem", It's OK if you don't remember, but by any chance do you recall where in the webinar he talks about this? Thanks so much for your guidance.
@annewr253, Would really appreciate it. Maybe once a week? Early or mid-evening on a week day? And we could maybe pick some drilling material 3-4 days before.
I'd probably enjoy the wedding and not take it that day. Your friendship is important and the test is offered more times this admissions year than it was before.
It really depends on what the scores are, whether you canceled one or more times, and other factors. Maybe read the Spivey blog because he's interviewed some people with 5 or 6 scores who were ultimately successful in gaining good offers to choice l…
I'd say do what you want and maybe tap into their alum networks and see if some people are willing to share their experiences. Maybe consider the winters in Chicago, but then there's the rent in Berkeley. I'd visit both if you can. And please let us…
Agreeing with @"surfy surf". There may be a spot in the application where you can mention you know an alum and how you know them, though. If not, you can mention at a visit.
Maybe stay in the game, read the Spivey blog, as I'm pretty sure there's articles on this situation, and consider writing an addendum with your improvement story after this happens. It sounds like you're going to improve.