My suggestion is to analyze the types of wrong questions on your paper. If you are wrong in one problem, you will usually focus on the next one. If you are wrong in that kind of thinking, or the so-called careless topic, then you should control the speed and habit of doing the topic when practicing. If you don't summarize yourself, even if you write a paper every day, the effect is not great.
At that time, I strictly controlled the time to fill in the blanks, and I finished it in 30-40 minutes at a time. Generally speaking, the correct rate is relatively high. When I come back to check, I only check the last two multiple-choice questions and fill-in-the-blank questions. The big questions are repeatedly pondered, and I want to get a score on a topic. Our college entrance examination questions were very difficult that year. I chose the whole team to fill in the blanks, and I didn't get full marks on the three big questions. . . Finally, it is above 130, which is enough.