Nobody has the knowledge in all fields. If your reading is ok, and you can grasp the theme of the article, the problem must be the questions. I've found GMAT RC questions are becoming more and more tricky. Usually you can't decide between two of the five answers. What you have to do then is to go back to the specific part, read through the sentence, or even the whole paragraph very quickly, compare it with the question, try to find out the previously unnoticed differences, and choose the one that is consistent with the main idea of that paragraph.
以下是引用pegasus_BMW在2003-4-5 23:58:00的发言: Nobody has the knowledge in all fields. If your reading is ok, and you can grasp the theme of the article, the problem must be the questions.
Agree with BMW. I 'd like to emphasize the answering skills. Suggest you to explore the subtle differences among options. Pitfalls of ETS follow some rules, and you could figure out most of them, such as '混偏反无'.
There is two possible reasons: 1. you don't understand fully the article, or you can't describe briefly it in your words, sometime you feel" oh, i can understand all sentences and words, then i understand the article!" No, it isn't. You should have a idea of the theme, the framework and the author's attitude. 2. You didn't grasp the ways to find the right answer. Please refer to the article about the yangji's ways.