I took the GMAT today after three months of steady preparation. In the course of those three months (Jan. 20th to April 20th), I did the following:
1. Enrolled in a Princeton Review course ($900)
2. Completed every Quant problem in OG, Kaplan 800, Quantatative Review, plus 300 +/- problems provided with the PR course
3. Corrected every error that I made and tried to reinforce the concepts with which I was struggling by making flash cards, designing quizzes for myself, etc.
4. Took 8 separate practice tests with these results (in chronological order):
Test 1, 1/20: 590 (V40, Q31) Princeton Review (PR)
Test 2, 2/2: 640 (V40, Q36) Power Prep #1 (free)
Test 3, 2/16: 640 (V40, Q39) PR
Test 4, 3/1: 620 (V39, Q37) PR
Test 5, 3/8: 670 (V41, Q41) Power Prep #2 (free)
Test 6, 3/15: 610 (V41, Q34) Veritas Prep
Test 7, 4/4: 650 (V41, Q39) PR
Test 8, 4/17: 640 (V39, Q39) PR
I spent the grand majority (probably 95%) of my time studying math, since my verbal scores on the practice tests were consistently within the 89-93% percentile range. I also wanted to improve my quant score because of the emphasis that top schools place on quant ability.
Long story short, I scored a 590 today (V34, Q37), which takes me right down memory lane to January 20, when my studying began. I am enraged, perplexed, and downright disappointed right now. But instead of boring you guys with a long-winded rant about how pissed off I am, let me share some observations with those of you who have yet to take the real thing:
1. Practice tests, obviously, are not accurate indicators of how you will perform on the test. If you score highly on a practice test, save the champagne. It's worthless.
2. I found the real Quant questions to be considerably more difficult than those on the practice tests. Which brings me to my broader point: The first 50% of the questions in OG are worthless, unless you want to get a general familiarity with the types of questions presented on the GMAT. Focus on the tough questions--the questions that you have no idea how to answer on your first attempt--and try to find as many of those as possible to do.
3. After feeling like I bombed the quant section, I decided to really focus on the verbal, hoping to offset the damage that I'd done. The V section seemed no more difficult than anything I'd encountered previously. I was relaxed throughout the whole thing, took each question at a measured pace (2:03 remaining when I read the final question), and...34. I went from 90% to 69%. I have no idea how this happened, nor do I want to know at the moment. After spending $1300 and 200+ hours studying, and not improving my score at all, I'm incapable of doing anything but licking my wounds and feeling sorry for myself right now.
I just wish that I'd scored 34V on some of the practice tests. If that had happened, I would have surely devoted more time to it. As it is, I feel a bit shortchanged by the folks at Princeton Review and Powerprep.
Good luck to you all.
1. Enrolled in a Princeton Review course ($900)
2. Completed every Quant problem in OG, Kaplan 800, Quantatative Review, plus 300 +/- problems provided with the PR course
3. Corrected every error that I made and tried to reinforce the concepts with which I was struggling by making flash cards, designing quizzes for myself, etc.
4. Took 8 separate practice tests with these results (in chronological order):
Test 1, 1/20: 590 (V40, Q31) Princeton Review (PR)
Test 2, 2/2: 640 (V40, Q36) Power Prep #1 (free)
Test 3, 2/16: 640 (V40, Q39) PR
Test 4, 3/1: 620 (V39, Q37) PR
Test 5, 3/8: 670 (V41, Q41) Power Prep #2 (free)
Test 6, 3/15: 610 (V41, Q34) Veritas Prep
Test 7, 4/4: 650 (V41, Q39) PR
Test 8, 4/17: 640 (V39, Q39) PR
I spent the grand majority (probably 95%) of my time studying math, since my verbal scores on the practice tests were consistently within the 89-93% percentile range. I also wanted to improve my quant score because of the emphasis that top schools place on quant ability.
Long story short, I scored a 590 today (V34, Q37), which takes me right down memory lane to January 20, when my studying began. I am enraged, perplexed, and downright disappointed right now. But instead of boring you guys with a long-winded rant about how pissed off I am, let me share some observations with those of you who have yet to take the real thing:
1. Practice tests, obviously, are not accurate indicators of how you will perform on the test. If you score highly on a practice test, save the champagne. It's worthless.
2. I found the real Quant questions to be considerably more difficult than those on the practice tests. Which brings me to my broader point: The first 50% of the questions in OG are worthless, unless you want to get a general familiarity with the types of questions presented on the GMAT. Focus on the tough questions--the questions that you have no idea how to answer on your first attempt--and try to find as many of those as possible to do.
3. After feeling like I bombed the quant section, I decided to really focus on the verbal, hoping to offset the damage that I'd done. The V section seemed no more difficult than anything I'd encountered previously. I was relaxed throughout the whole thing, took each question at a measured pace (2:03 remaining when I read the final question), and...34. I went from 90% to 69%. I have no idea how this happened, nor do I want to know at the moment. After spending $1300 and 200+ hours studying, and not improving my score at all, I'm incapable of doing anything but licking my wounds and feeling sorry for myself right now.
I just wish that I'd scored 34V on some of the practice tests. If that had happened, I would have surely devoted more time to it. As it is, I feel a bit shortchanged by the folks at Princeton Review and Powerprep.
Good luck to you all.












