Effective study plan to boost from 570 to 700 in 2 months?

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Having obtained an underwhelming GMAT score yesterday of 570 (shudder - Q:39; V:29)- significantly lower than on my practice tests - I now need to focus on boosting that score within 2 months to 700 minimum. I've highlighted some of the issues from yesterday's exam where I would really value your expert advice. I would also love to hear how I can better structure my study to boost that score with max 2 hours study possible on weekdays and unlimited at the weekend.

A bit about me that could help understand where I'm coming from: business professional with 10 years working experience and a successful marketing management career. Last time I sat a formal exam it was at least that long ago back in business school, although my high-school exams appear more similar in format to the GMAT and that was 15 years ago. I was excellent at Maths back then but with dedicated full-time study spanning several years � Exams didn't fase me back then, and while I can present to any level of my organisation currently or speak to a conference room of several thousand people, I seem to have lost those exam-taking skills and was completely overwhelmed by the GMAT experience yesterday.

Issues from yesterday's attempt where I need your help:
Poor time management in verbal: I am at ease with verbal content and strategy. I was scoring in the 99% percentile on all prep tests and while I struggled somewhat with time, I always managed to finish by skimming through earlier questions. Something went disastrously wrong with my verbal time management yesterday. I was rolling along and feeling I was killing the verbal when I looked at the timer and noticed I have 13 questions to answer in roughly 10 minutes remaining! I do not know how I lost track of time or didn't catch the timing issue earlier when I looked at the clock - anxiety, fatigue perhaps? Regardless, I would appreciate expert advice on how to become more effective in verbal time management specifically.

Anxiety-Fatigue:
I literally crashed yesterday energy-wise. It was a morning exam (9:30am) when my energy is usually ok, though perhaps not optimal. I didn't want to plan the GMAT for the afternoon as I'd probably increase the anxiety level the hours beforehand. Nervousness usually boosts my adrenaline and, therefore, my performance in my business life, but yesterday I tipped over the edge into pure exhaustion before even stepping into the room, already pre-thinking I would have to re-sit the exam. So my mindset was definitely not the best one to get me through the exam. How can I work on this aspect to prevent this from happening again 2nd time around?

Generally poor quant (Q: 39)
I wasn't terribly surprised by my Quant score. I have taken 5 weeks of preparation for the GMAT and have never improved my Quant drastically in that time, despite having taken 4 group tutoring sessions. Major issues in word translation - I can understand the language but cannot translate to algebraic solutions with ease - probability and combinatorics. So, I can only conclude that my method of studying quant is not an effective one. Here is what I did - I studied the concepts in-depth, I practiced the questions in the MGMAT books and did around 60% of the OG questions. However, truth be told, I wasn't comfortable with all the questions and didn't have time to go through all the OG questions, let alone a second time. So practicing these questions in a way the learning sticks is most probably something I need to focus on rather than prep exams. I could recite all rules off by heart and explain concepts but the "doing" is not following with the same ease strangely - lack of practice perhaps? What are your thoughts on how I could improve quant?

Advice for appropriate 2-month study plan:
With the above in mind, my time available to study, what are your suggestions for a 2 month study plan to improve my score from 570 (grrr, again) to 700 minimum?

Thanks :D
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by unclesam2013 » Wed Nov 28, 2012 9:55 pm
Well I prepared for 2 months too and got a fairly good score. You may wanna go through my debrief and see if you can get some insights.

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by Orla M » Thu Nov 29, 2012 2:17 pm
congratulations on the fantastic result @unclesam2013! I'll need to take a similar approach on quant as you have on verbal. All the best with the rest of the application process!

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by digvijayk » Thu Nov 29, 2012 5:26 pm
A similar thing happened to me in my last attempt. Anyways, here are a few things you can do.
I have taken 5 weeks of preparation for the GMAT
The first thing you NEED to do is step away from the GMAT for a few days! Zero GMAT for 2-5 days. Celebrate the fact that you took the test.
although my high-school exams appear more similar in format to the GMAT and that was 15 years ago
The second thing you NEED to do is understand that the GMAT is nothing like your school exams! It is a test of reasoning, psychology and skill. The GMAT is as much about QUITTING questions by guessing and MOVING on. Its not about getting ALL the questions right. Please understand that just because you are good at maths, will not get you a score on the GMAT, as the GMAT is not simply about maths! DS for the most part isn't maths! Many times the GMAT quant is about pitfalls and traps which you need to avoid- the questions themselves are quite simple. So understand and absorb the fact that you will have to learn to quit when you can't solve questions and move on!
I would also love to hear how I can better structure my study to boost that score with max 2 hours study possible on weekdays and unlimited at the weekend.
The 2 hour a day part is great, but the unlimited part is dangerous. Your verbal score is guaranteed to fall with increasing number of hours of practice. Nothing more than 3 hours! And one day off every week. You are an experienced professional and so your CR would be pretty solid. Use that to your advantage. The study plan may include looking at your mock tests and analyzing them to find out which is your weakest sub-section - CR, SC or RC. And even within these sub-sections, which types of questions you need to focus on. Then go study, build concepts, practice some questions, analyze and re-visit any remaning weak areas. If you allocate 5 days per section, you'd be able to do this in 25 days. Spend the rest of the time working on taking mock tests, analyzing them and then working on the weaker sections/topics.

The third thing you NEED to do, is build up your test taking endurance. Take mock tests at regular intervals. Pick a timing strategy from BTG forums and try it, if it works great, else use another one. Google "thursdays with ron", you'll find the free videos, one of which is ONLY about timing!

The fourth thing you WANT to do, is not focus on the "doing"! 39 is still an ok score on quant. But, if you really do want to improve, don't just solve questions and move on! Analyze where you went wrong or what the official method of solving the question is. Maybe you got a question right by sheer luck, so best to understand how to solve the GMAT way! Like I said, once you understand that GMAT quant is not maths, you'll improve drastically. Since, there are ways of solving questions without solving or by just understanding the language correctly.

The last thing you WANT to do is relax as much as you can a day before each mock test. Use the same strategy on real test. Read all the gmat prep stories on BTG, you'll see almost everyone resting a day before the test. The psychology did you in on your test! The truth is everything I have told you above simply adds to calming your nerves. If you have a timing strategy, a quitting strategy, etc. you are already half relaxed. Its just a test, you don't need to worry about it that much. Its one test, on which the calmer you are, the higher you score!

BTW, if it helps, here is my post, on which extremely useful advice was posted by a revered expert and at the end of it you'll find a post by me on how I improved. Use it well, it will answer most of your queries:

https://www.beatthegmat.com/my-gmat-new- ... 12224.html

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by Orla M » Thu Nov 29, 2012 11:49 pm
digvijayk - excellent advice! I agree that it's the psychology of the exam and the excess studying that led to disaster. Great advice from Ron also on the timing. I'm familiar with his videos - in fact I used quite a lot of his stuff in my study, though I didn't see the timing video which I'll be sure to view.

Thanks again!