A long, hard road: 760 - 99% percentile (Q47 V47 6.0 AWA)

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Just got back from the exam, needless to say I'm quite happy with the results although I wish my quant was a hair better. Thanks to everyone on this forum, I've been reading for quite awhile though never really posted much. With that, some advice for those undergoing this experience.

Materials utilized and brief comments:

- OG 11 & 12: great resources, but use in a measured approach. More below.
- OG quant & verbal: great materials for more nuanced studying.
- Kaplan Premier w/ online tests: valuable in my opinion. CATs seemed very accurate. Good drills.
- GMATPrep: the best; save these exams and do not waste them.
- GMATWrite: buy one of these at most. Don't dedicate too much time to AWA.
- GMATFocus: a good diagnostic; very accurate in my case.
- Paper exams: Surprisingly accurate!Ddon't discount them because they are old.
- Veritas Probability book: good if you're weak with probability / combinations.
- MGMAT SC: very valuable, worth dedicating a few weeks to thoroughly understand.
- MGMAT number properties: a bit dense for me but a good resource.
- Critical Reading bible: decent to below average.
- McGraw Hill GMAT: total waste of money. What a horrible, shameful book.

General

- Practice for the exam as if you are taking the exam. That means in a quiet room, using the dry erase pad, timed questions, etc. Start your practice exams at the time you will take the actual exam; drink coffee if you plan to drink coffee on the test day; etc.
- Understand your mistakes and WHY you made your mistakes. Burning through 200 OG questions in one sitting to brag about a "99% hit rate" is a waste of time in my opinion. Quality of study is a bigger factor then quantity.
- The people are Pearson Vue are first class; I can't imagine a better testing environment
- People will disagree, but I think the MGMAT CATs are a waste of time. They are far too difficult and are nowhere near realistic.
- At the end of the day, grab your balls and take the exam. You will always have nagging doubts, suspicions that you aren't ready, everyone is smarter than you, etc.

Quant

- If you want an elite quant score, you need to study the MGMAT guides. Kaplan and the OG guides are not going to get it done. I was a little disappointed in my quant score due to this.
- It seemed to me that "elite" quant questions are pure formula questions, especially DS factoring questions. I found the PS questions to be very manageable.

Verbal

- In my opinion, your approach should be different depending upon whether you are a North American / UK applicant or not
- Foreign applicants (i.e. India, China, Japan, etc.) should dedicate much more time to verbal prep. Learning the idioms, proper sentence structure, etc. At least half the verbal answers are easily eliminable due to awkward phrasing, incorrect idiom usage, etc.
- North American applicants - read the MGMAT SC guide. Much of the everyday language we use is riddled with grammatical errors! Foreign applicants do have an advantage from this standpoint

In any case, please let me know if you have questions. A reasonably intelligent person should definitely be capable of scoring >700 on this exam, it comes down to effort, intensity, and desire. I'm glad to provide advice, tips, etc. if helpful.

EDIT - got the AWA results, 6.0 to my surprise.
Last edited by Longhorn on Wed Oct 27, 2010 12:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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by DanaJ » Sun Oct 24, 2010 1:28 am
Congratulations for your score, the verbal is really good! Good luck with the rest of your applications!

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by GMATMadeEasy » Mon Oct 25, 2010 4:50 am
v 47 is an achievement. How do you feel at this verbal level questions were as compared to OG ?

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by Longhorn » Mon Oct 25, 2010 6:23 am
I too was surprised at my verbal score, as I had consistently scored 44-45V in mock exams. In any case, the verbal questions are very similar to the OG. I actually found the RC to be on par with the OG and much easier than what Kaplan was throwing at me. SC was very tricky and more comparable to the MGMAT SG guide and probably the last ~25 questions in the Verbal OG.

My suggestions would be:

Reading Comprehension & Critical Reasoning: this is one of the few areas where quantity may matter more than quality. Go through hundreds of these and learn to be patient and thoroughly analyze passages. You have to train yourself to become disciplined on these because verbal is the last section of the test and by the end you just want to click "next" every time. I don't think there are any legit tricks to this section other than practicing a lot.

Sentence Correction: MGMAT SC was very helpful with these, although MGMAT probably goes a bit overboard with question difficulty. I think Kaplan pointed out that the vast majority of SC problems test your knowledge of: 1) Subject Verb agreement 2) Pronoun usage and 3) Idioms. Non-native speakers must dedicate a great deal of time here, because native speakers can easily eliminate half of the answers. For native speakers, I recommend reviewing comma usage, semicolon usage (tested quite frequently to my surprise), and IDIOMS. Most native speakers, myself included, frequently use incorrect idioms that will absolutely destroy your verbal score.

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by uprightcitizen » Tue Oct 26, 2010 9:00 pm
congrats! we got the same score with the same breakdown : )

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by Dan@VinciaPrep » Wed Nov 03, 2010 1:21 am
Good advice about the idioms (make sure you native speakers study them). That's one area that I see many native speakers breezing through, but making a fair number of mistakes on.
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by WilliamGCash » Wed Nov 03, 2010 1:12 pm
Good job, Longhorn.

Did you go to UT for undergrad?

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by doitright » Sat Nov 06, 2010 11:34 am
great job.

i am currently preparing for the gmat very soon.

CR from MGMAT has been a horrible experience. I breezed through the 2 OGs completely fine with minimal mistakes, but somehow it is not reflected in my MGMAT CATs. Perhaps you are right. Or maybe it is just me...

My confidence for now is a bit of low because I finished the MGMAT question banks, and results were just terrible.

It would be great to receive some guidance from you.

In quant, ,my focus for the next few days would be on:
number properties and inequalities and combinations/probability. in both PS and DS

I used to be a really mathy guy, but I think the fact that I have never been taught shortcuts bogged me down a lot. I am trying to practice hard on the verbal as I believe boosting it would help the overall score a lot. It seems to be that verbal is weighed sightly more heavily in the over all score.

Do you have any suggestions?

Sincere thanks.