Any explanation for an strange effect?What am I doing wrong?

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Hello guys!!

I would like to know why every time I prepare the GMAT exam, 3 weeks before the exam in the tests (MGMAT tests) that I do, I always score more than 650, and towards the exam date, the score drops to 600, and finally I score 590 or 580 in the GMAT.

What am I doing wrong?

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by Osirus@VeritasPrep » Mon Apr 12, 2010 7:55 am
I think I know exactly what you're doing wrong.

You are probably forgetting information. It is very important to not just learn new material or to shore up weaknesses, but you have to constantly go back and review older material otherwise you will forget. I would suggest spending at least 2 days a week reviewing older material just to make sure it stays fresh in your mind.
https://www.beatthegmat.com/the-retake-o ... 51414.html

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by Brian@VeritasPrep » Mon Apr 12, 2010 8:53 pm
Osirus makes a great point about staying fresh on the GMAT overall, and not letting your core competencies atrophy while you focus on some of the newer concepts in the last few weeks. I typically advise spending at least 1/3 of your study time on things you'd consider to be your strong suits, just so that you don't "lose them".

One other point that jumped out at me, though, was the fact that you use the phrase "every time" and the word "always" to describe your situation. I have to imagine that your sample size for this pattern of the final 3 weeks before an official GMAT is fairly small, right? Maybe 3-4 attempts at the test?

If that's the case, "every time" and "always" are much, much more prominent in your own mind than they are in reality. It happens because you expect it to happen, and when you get a twinge of "here we go again", you lose your mental edge.

A tangential example - I'm a marathon runner, and in most training cycles I usually find that one of my "long runs" (15+ miles) in the 4-5 weeks prior to race day is a debacle. I feel like I'm wearing lead boots, I get dehydrated and worn down more quickly than usual, and I'm left staggering the last 3-4 miles wondering how I'll ever be able to run a good 26.2 if I can't run a good 16. And then..

-I remind myself that I'd much rather endure my worst-case-scenario in practice than on race day
-I look at the conditions around myself and realize that I wasn't geared toward peak performance. I didn't rest the day before (I probably ran 6-7 miles after working 10 hours), I didn't take on proper nutrition or carry enough water, I didn't run at the most convenient time of day (squeezing in one more training run just to say I did it, instead of making it a focal point of my day). Simply put, I treated it like practice, and I got exactly what I put into it.
-I learn from the experience and remind myself to be focused on race day, to hydrate and eat properly, to get a good night's sleep, and to be confident that, even when I'm not at my peak, I'm mentally tough enough to stick with a brutal 16-miler.


If you analyze your own subpar practice tests, you'll probably find similar elements. When you do them, do you typically:

-Take them after work? After a study session?
-Squeeze them into your day, instead of making them a focal point?
-Skip the breaks to "get them done faster"? Find yourself distracted on a few questions because you're just ready to be done with the whole study process?

I'd argue that you can undoubtedly say yes to a few of those. Then, when you get a score that's significantly-but-not-catastrophically lower than your target, do you:

-Start to panic, thinking that "it's happening again"?

or

-Remind yourself that everyone has bad days, and you just got yours out of the way, and then go on with pride knowing that on your worst day your GMAT score is still better than that of 60+% of test takers?

I'm convinced based on the way you wrote that at least some of your pattern is based on the fact that you expect it now. Remind yourself that you're poised to do well, and the positive attitude should be good for at least a few points.
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by kel2010 » Tue Apr 13, 2010 6:17 am
hello brian,

you wrote "If you analyze your own subpar practice tests, you'll probably find similar elements. When you do them, do you typically:

-Take them after work? After a study session?
-Squeeze them into your day, instead of making them a focal point?
-Skip the breaks to "get them done faster"? Find yourself distracted on a few questions because you're just ready to be done with the whole study process?

I'd argue that you can undoubtedly say yes to a few of those. Then, when you get a score that's significantly-but-not-catastrophically lower than your target, do you:

-Start to panic, thinking that "it's happening again"?


after reading your mail i found that for me answer to all these questions is "yes" and im also sailing on the same ship (as big0space). i have taken GMAT twice and both the times my scores were around 600. i beleive my quants is manageable because first time i got 48 and next time i got 49. My CR and RC are really bad. this i found out from my practice tests. i donno how to handle this situation. i want to take the test again. recently i have got married and got located to US. im not working now. But in india i was working as a PM. my schedule was hectic from 8.30 am to 9pm. May be this also played some role in my scores. But i dont know. im confused. please help me. and do let me know whether i should take the gmat 3rd time or should i let it go?

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by Brian@VeritasPrep » Tue Apr 13, 2010 9:32 am
Hi Kel,

Welcome to the US, and congratulations on getting married! I'm sorry - but not surprised - to hear that you could answer "yes" to so many of those questions...it's fairly common for people to get discouraged when they underperform on practice tests taken under less-than-ideal conditions. It's important, as a result, to use practice tests as tools to learn, and not as true measurements of your ability. The trends and the takeaways are much, much more important.

In your case, I'd definitely suggest that you take the GMAT again. If your quant scores are hovering near perfect, but your verbal scores have suffered in large part because of a schedule hectic enough to significantly impact your studies, it sounds like you have quite a bit of room for improvement, and time to get it done. If you're asking the question, it means you're not satisfied with that 600 score (and, honestly, with a 600 score bolstered by a near-perfect quant score, I could see many schools being worried by what must be a fairly low verbal score...you have an "unbalanced" 600, which is a big less desirable to schools than a "balanced" one), so you should definitely take it again.

I'd use the time that you now have to try to identify a few major themes in your frustration on CR and RC, and then consider the study resources available to help you bring them up. There are quite a few books that people on BTG often recommend - and the Veritas Prep books are going to be available for individual sale later this month...I'm biased, but highly recommend them - and you might also consider a class so that you have some guidance through the verbal questions, as well.

It certainly sounds like you have the ability; now that you have the time, I think you're definitely capable of significant improvement on the verbal section to give yourself a very competitive score.
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by kel2010 » Fri Apr 16, 2010 11:02 am
Thanks a lot Brian...
i have to do it this time.. thanks.