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ctd Just gettin' started!
Joined: 03 Oct 2006 Posts: 1
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Location: Lexington, KY
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Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2006 1:40 pm Post subject: practice test scores |
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| I would like to know peoples opinions of REA (Research & Education Association) prep books and test software. The practice test CD is CAT, and I would like to know how verbal, quant and overall scores from one of these correlates to the real thing. Thanks in advance. |
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beatthegmat Founder

Joined: 13 Feb 2006 Posts: 3547
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Location: California GMAT Score: 720
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Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 8:23 pm Post subject: |
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I am not very familiar with REA, but I haven't heard very good reviews about these books. I would recommend sticking with Princeton Review, Kaplan, and OG. _________________ Eric
Discounts on Kaplan, Manhattan GMAT, Veritas Prep, and Stacy Blackman Consulting - see the links at the top of the page for more info.
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ianstrike Moderator
Joined: 29 Sep 2006 Posts: 35
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Location: New York, NY
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Posted: Fri Oct 06, 2006 7:58 am Post subject: |
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REA books are NOT strong for test prep. They do a good job with their academic course reviews (Biology, Chemistry, etc.) However, their simulated test questions NEVER look, taste or smell enough like the real thing.
While I've never played with the simulated CAT on their CD, I am disinclined to trust it. Since their GMAT book has tons of questions that are really not test-like, it's, it's hard to imagine that they've done the due diligence to develop a CAT that FEELS like a simulated GMAC test.
If you already have the REA book, you can use it for your early content review, but I absolutely wouldn't trust it to inform your understanding of what the exam is really like.
As for their test's ability to give you a meaningful score, I would be careful to not rely on their scoring.
If you've already taken an REA practice test, take their number with a grain of salt. If you got a high score from REA, great: use that experience to build confidence when you move on to the more reliable simulated material (Kap, TPR & GMAC). If you took REA's CAT exam and did poorly, don't despair: their software is a blunt tool. _________________ Ian Streicher |
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