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harish Rising GMAT Star

Joined: 30 May 2008 Posts: 42
Thanks given: 6 Thanked 0 times in 0 posts
Location: India Test Date: Aug08 Target GMAT Score: 740
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Prasanna Moderator

Joined: 26 Feb 2007 Posts: 418
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Posted: Thu Jul 03, 2008 12:37 pm Post subject: |
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harish
I would say you have made a good start. There is room for improvement. I think you should identify the question types in each section you have made mistakes and prep on them. Once you strengthen your basics you could try Kaplan 800. I have found Manhattan SC guide very useful.
720 should be within your reach if you focus your energies in the right direction. Get your basics right on all question types
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lastday Rising GMAT Star
Joined: 04 Jun 2008 Posts: 30
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Posted: Thu Jul 03, 2008 1:10 pm Post subject: |
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| Don't use Kaplan for verbal. It's not representative of the real thing. Use Princeton Review...it's much better.
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Stacey Koprince GMAT Instructor

Joined: 27 Dec 2006 Posts: 1262
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Location: Bay Area, California GMAT Score: 770
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Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 5:04 pm Post subject: |
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Since you say that you can usually eliminate 3 choices confidently and then just struggle with the last two (the right one and the most tempting wrong one), another thing you need to do is go study those wrong answers. Ask yourself two quite different (though related) questions:
Why is this choice so tempting (even though it's wrong)?
Why is this choice actually wrong (even though it's so tempting)?
They specifically write choices to make them tempting but wrong. You need to learn how to identify those - and that takes actual analysis of those questions and tempting wrong answers. You can also use the forums here to help you brainstorm this stuff - post a question, mention the two answers you narrowed it down to, and ask the community to comment on why we think something's tempting, but wrong, and why it IS wrong, though tempting.
_________________ Stacey Koprince
GMAT Instructor
Director of Corporate Development, Northern California
Manhattan GMAT
Contributor to Beat The GMAT!
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