Below 50%
Do not buy a full mock first. Review the module structure, redo basic drills, and retake a short mixed set after one focused session.
Free timed diagnostic
Answer ten independent practice questions. Your result shows a readiness band, topic breakdown, and a focused next-step plan.
Treat the free mock as a signal, not a final verdict. A low score usually means one of three problems: you do not recognize the question type yet, you are losing time on medium questions, or you are guessing between two answer choices without a clear elimination rule.
After the result, review the weak topic label before taking another set. If reasoning is weak, practice assumptions and conclusions. If quantitative reasoning is weak, drill percentages, ratios, and averages. If data interpretation is weak, slow down on tables and charts before trying to increase speed.
Do not buy a full mock first. Review the module structure, redo basic drills, and retake a short mixed set after one focused session.
You are in the useful practice zone. Unlocking explanations and score tracking can help because the main problem is usually repeatable mistakes.
Move to longer timed sets, track pacing, and focus on avoiding careless errors rather than collecting more easy questions.
The diagnostic is intentionally short because the first session should reduce uncertainty quickly. If you finish with several guesses, write down which prompts felt unclear before looking at explanations. That note becomes your next study target.