Finally a 720 Q 49 V 40 AWA 6.0

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Finally a 720 Q 49 V 40 AWA 6.0

by anshulkrishna » Thu Jul 14, 2011 8:47 am
Hi,

Like many out there I have been following posts on beat the gmat, reading success stories and waiting for the day when I will have one to share of my own. After a long wait that day is finally here. I managed to score a 720 Q 49 V 40 AWA 6.0 and trust me there have been seldom moments in my life when I have been happier. The success does not come without a long struggle. I started my journey with the GMAT Feb 2010. I started preparing on my own relying on hearsay and solving recommended books and preps. I did not take any help from any of the training institutes. Today I realize the mistakes that I made. My first mistake was that I never wrote practice tests in totallity. It just used to be the math and english sections with long breaks in between. Seldom did I realize that the GMAT is nothing but a test of stamina and patience as well as the calm in one's mind. I needed to endure a 4 hour exam and trust me I was never there. Then came my second mistake. I took a date in June end and trust me I was no where near my target of 700+. The only prep on which I scored more than 700 was an 800 score prep in which the english score is anyways inflated. I was in a hurry to apply to schools that year and hence I did not correctly guage the level I was at. the result spoke for itself. I could only manage a 670. Q 50 (trust me I was lucky to get such an easy quant section) and V 30. I took a 2 week break to think through what had happened and then comes my biggest mistake. I saw an online ad about an institute that offers a fixed point increase guarantee over my existing gmat score. Still seeing a window to make it to the schools I wanted to get to later in the year, I enrolled and I scheduled my next attempt for Sept 2010. This is the biggest mistake I made. If the first attempt did not go well then what I knew was wrong and I needed to forget what I knew to make a new beginning and trust me 2 months was too short of a time to do so. This is the biggest piece of advice I would like to share with any aspirant. If your first attempt goes wrong, your dream of getting into a good school is not shattered. There is always a next time but you need to be patient before you take the next attempt as something that you are doing is wrong and you need to forget what you know and figure out what you are doing wrong. Another thing I would like to share is that keep the exam seperate from the application. I am not trying to say that dont plan the exam and the application process together, rather just plan the exam in no hurry to apply. This ways you just concentrate on the exam. Anyways, the Sept 2010 attempt ended with a 650 Q 44 and V 34. I guess the score increase guarantee did not hold in my case and I am partially to blame for the same. I still did not give up and decided to give myself a 6 month break, partially to recover from the better part of the year preparing for the GMAT and partailly to figure what was wrong. Feb 2011 is when I started preparing for the exam again. I had no set target to apply and no set date for the exam. I decided not to apply for the test till I thought I was ready. For me being ready was to see a constant score of 700+ constantly in 4 to 5 preps. Its not that I studied continously, I did take time off in between and I did spend time with family and friends whenever I felt like. One thing I did right was to write preps in totallity including AWA and analyzing my mistakes right after the preps. I also spread my preps during different times of the day to figure out what time of the day is my brain most active. Finally in early June I wrote prep 2 and managed a 720. I thought I was ready and scheduled my test for early July. Come exam day I could not believe my result. It was an exact repeat of prep 2. I managed a 720 and I could say that I was able to finally beat the GMAT. When I look back now and I realize what went wrong the only thing that I can tell other aspirants is:
1. Never give up. A bad score is not the end of the road. Perseverance is what finally paid off for me.
2. God forbid nothing goes wrong but if it does then take time to figure what went wrong. There is no hurry to write the exam and no hurry to apply. The B school of your dreams is going to look the same next year as well.
3. Nothing is said in stone, just choose what works for you. The reason I say this is that the experts always say that you should not study a day before the exam and go watch a movie or something. Well that did not work for me in my first 2 attempts. Personally I needed to be close to the exam and needed to practice till the last minute. I am not trying to say that what the experts say is wrong, I am just trying to say is that its upto you to figure out what works for you.
4. Write 4 hour preps. Never skip the AWA section and always time your breaks. Every prep should be as close to the actual exam as possible. Also, always analyze your preps after writing them and dont leave the analysis waiting for long as just as teh prep is fresh in your memory just after writing it.
5. Figure out what time of the day works for you and try booking a slot for that time of the day.
6. There is no short cut for perseverance and hard work.
At the end of the day the feeling if success is something that will live with you for the rest of your life.
Hope this was helpful.
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by careers.asd » Thu Jul 14, 2011 9:02 am
Congrates !! Please can you share what worked for you in RC and CR.

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by Frankenstein » Thu Jul 14, 2011 9:06 am
Hi,
Congrats on your great score. Your hard work paid off!
Good Luck with your apps.
Cheers!

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by anshulkrishna » Thu Jul 14, 2011 9:14 am
Thanks!! :-)

What really worked for me in CR and RC was extensive practice. Well I had no set strategy in RC but type casting questions and being careful with the small subtle difference that would make an answer choice right or wrong. If I could not get a particular passage I went back and read the passage again to figure out what was going on. I did not rely on making maps as such. Its just that after reading the passage I just closed my eyes for 10 seconds or so and tried to recollect what I read and what the passage was trying to say. I did go back to the passage multiple times for attention to detail and inference questions.

In CR my strategy was to master patterns, keeping the assumption the arguments makes in mind. Every argument can be type casted into cause effect, analogy, odd man out or paradox and my the extensive practice helped me to figure what pattern applied to the CR question at hand and what I needed to stress on to get to the correct answer. For example if I could typecast an argument to cause effect then I knew that I needed to find another cause to weaken it or find support for the cause to strengthen it and so on.

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by careers.asd » Fri Jul 22, 2011 12:48 am
anshulkrishna wrote:Thanks!! :-)

What really worked for me in CR and RC was extensive practice. Well I had no set strategy in RC but type casting questions and being careful with the small subtle difference that would make an answer choice right or wrong. If I could not get a particular passage I went back and read the passage again to figure out what was going on. I did not rely on making maps as such. Its just that after reading the passage I just closed my eyes for 10 seconds or so and tried to recollect what I read and what the passage was trying to say. I did go back to the passage multiple times for attention to detail and inference questions.

In CR my strategy was to master patterns, keeping the assumption the arguments makes in mind. Every argument can be type casted into cause effect, analogy, odd man out or paradox and my the extensive practice helped me to figure what pattern applied to the CR question at hand and what I needed to stress on to get to the correct answer. For example if I could typecast an argument to cause effect then I knew that I needed to find another cause to weaken it or find support for the cause to strengthen it and so on.
Anshul, Will be it be possible for your to share the CR notes . Especially, the one which contains all the patterns and the approach to handle one by one. In case you have prepared !

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Fri Jul 22, 2011 6:43 am
Great debrief, anshulkrishna!

My favorite part is:
For me, being ready was to see a score of 700+ constantly in 4 to 5 preps.
I think a lot students can benefit from this. I have seen many posts where students have a certain target score (say 700+), and they are surprised when they score lower on test day (say 640).
Then, when they list their practice test scores (say 600, 650, 620, 630, 620, 710) we can see that they reached their target score only once.

It's easy (and natural) to dismiss low practice test scores as anomalies and the high scores as true measures of abilities, but students need to demonstrate (at least twice) that they can achieve their target score before they write the official test).

Your point about the GMAT being a test of stamina is also very important.

Cheers,
Brent
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by maihuna » Fri Jul 22, 2011 12:50 pm
Hi Brent:
Hi Brent:
I have one question : I have written tests of several companies and so see duplicate questions. In my MGMAT I have scores of (730 740 690 760 760 770) and In Knewton (720).

I recently bought kaplan online tests of 4, I had not seen large part of these contents, the breakup and individual section are eratic, i.e. 55 in Quant but I have seen the following total: 720, 760, 760 and bom 690 today.

This 690 is kind of married to my as my last two official score(latest written and half back) has been 690's, so whenever I see them kind of I get shaken. With today's last test of kaplan I am out of standard prep companies. In repeated GmatPrep tests I do see 770+ but they are useless, as lot of questions are rotted by heart now.

Now my question is: do u think I am ready? Please advice.

Thanks.
Brent@GMATPrepNow wrote:Great debrief, anshulkrishna!

It's easy (and natural) to dismiss low practice test scores as anomalies and the high scores as true measures of abilities, but students need to demonstrate (at least twice) that they can achieve their target score before they write the official test).

Your point about the GMAT being a test of stamina is also very important.

Cheers,
Brent
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by maihuna » Sun Jul 24, 2011 4:55 am
Brent can you please reply to my post.
maihuna wrote:Hi Brent:
Hi Brent:
I have one question : I have written tests of several companies and so see duplicate questions. In my MGMAT I have scores of (730 740 690 760 760 770) and In Knewton (720).

I recently bought kaplan online tests of 4, I had not seen large part of these contents, the breakup and individual section are eratic, i.e. 55 in Quant but I have seen the following total: 720, 760, 760 and bom 690 today.

This 690 is kind of married to my as my last two official score(latest written and half back) has been 690's, so whenever I see them kind of I get shaken. With today's last test of kaplan I am out of standard prep companies. In repeated GmatPrep tests I do see 770+ but they are useless, as lot of questions are rotted by heart now.

Now my question is: do u think I am ready? Please advice.

Thanks.
Brent@GMATPrepNow wrote:Great debrief, anshulkrishna!

It's easy (and natural) to dismiss low practice test scores as anomalies and the high scores as true measures of abilities, but students need to demonstrate (at least twice) that they can achieve their target score before they write the official test).

Your point about the GMAT being a test of stamina is also very important.

Cheers,
Brent
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by maihuna » Tue Jul 26, 2011 6:08 am
brent pilize.
maihuna wrote:Brent can you please reply to my post.
maihuna wrote:Hi Brent:
Hi Brent:
I have one question : I have written tests of several companies and so see duplicate questions. In my MGMAT I have scores of (730 740 690 760 760 770) and In Knewton (720).

I recently bought kaplan online tests of 4, I had not seen large part of these contents, the breakup and individual section are eratic, i.e. 55 in Quant but I have seen the following total: 720, 760, 760 and bom 690 today.

This 690 is kind of married to my as my last two official score(latest written and half back) has been 690's, so whenever I see them kind of I get shaken. With today's last test of kaplan I am out of standard prep companies. In repeated GmatPrep tests I do see 770+ but they are useless, as lot of questions are rotted by heart now.

Now my question is: do u think I am ready? Please advice.

Thanks.
Brent@GMATPrepNow wrote:Great debrief, anshulkrishna!

It's easy (and natural) to dismiss low practice test scores as anomalies and the high scores as true measures of abilities, but students need to demonstrate (at least twice) that they can achieve their target score before they write the official test).

Your point about the GMAT being a test of stamina is also very important.

Cheers,
Brent
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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Fri Jul 29, 2011 8:04 am
maihuna wrote:Hi Brent:
Hi Brent:
I have one question : I have written tests of several companies and so see duplicate questions. In my MGMAT I have scores of (730 740 690 760 760 770) and In Knewton (720).

I recently bought kaplan online tests of 4, I had not seen large part of these contents, the breakup and individual section are eratic, i.e. 55 in Quant but I have seen the following total: 720, 760, 760 and bom 690 today.

This 690 is kind of married to my as my last two official score(latest written and half back) has been 690's, so whenever I see them kind of I get shaken. With today's last test of kaplan I am out of standard prep companies. In repeated GmatPrep tests I do see 770+ but they are useless, as lot of questions are rotted by heart now.

Now my question is: do u think I am ready? Please advice.

Thanks.
Brent@GMATPrepNow wrote:Great debrief, anshulkrishna!

It's easy (and natural) to dismiss low practice test scores as anomalies and the high scores as true measures of abilities, but students need to demonstrate (at least twice) that they can achieve their target score before they write the official test).

Your point about the GMAT being a test of stamina is also very important.

Cheers,
Brent
Hi maihuna,

Sorry for the delay - and thanks for the message.

I know what you mean about duplicate questions - they can certainly make it difficult to gauge your actual abilities.

It's hard to tell whether you are ready to write the GMAT since I don't know what your target score is. I reread your posts, but I don't think you mentioned it.

Having said that, if your target score is 700+, I'd say you are ready.

Cheers,
Brent
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by maihuna » Fri Jul 29, 2011 8:11 am
Hi Brent,
I am looking for a 730+ score. I am not good with 700 as the target schools I am looking into requires above 720's.

Please comment.

Also, do you think there is any other source I can reliably test myself.
Thanks,
nagendra
Brent@GMATPrepNow wrote:
maihuna wrote:Hi Brent:
Hi Brent:
I have one question : I have written tests of several companies and so see duplicate questions. In my MGMAT I have scores of (730 740 690 760 760 770) and In Knewton (720).

I recently bought kaplan online tests of 4, I had not seen large part of these contents, the breakup and individual section are eratic, i.e. 55 in Quant but I have seen the following total: 720, 760, 760 and bom 690 today.

This 690 is kind of married to my as my last two official score(latest written and half back) has been 690's, so whenever I see them kind of I get shaken. With today's last test of kaplan I am out of standard prep companies. In repeated GmatPrep tests I do see 770+ but they are useless, as lot of questions are rotted by heart now.

Now my question is: do u think I am ready? Please advice.

Thanks.
Brent@GMATPrepNow wrote:Great debrief, anshulkrishna!

It's easy (and natural) to dismiss low practice test scores as anomalies and the high scores as true measures of abilities, but students need to demonstrate (at least twice) that they can achieve their target score before they write the official test).

Your point about the GMAT being a test of stamina is also very important.

Cheers,
Brent
Hi maihuna,

Sorry for the delay - and thanks for the message.

I know what you mean about duplicate questions - they can certainly make it difficult to gauge your actual abilities.

It's hard to tell whether you are ready to write the GMAT since I don't know what your target score is. I reread your posts, but I don't think you mentioned it.

Having said that, if your target score is 700+, I'd say you are ready.

Cheers,
Brent
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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Fri Jul 29, 2011 8:20 am
Hi Brent,
I am looking for a 730+ score. I am not good with 700 as the target schools I am looking into requires above 720's.

Please comment.

Also, do you think there is any other source I can reliably test myself.
Thanks,
nagendra
Hi nagendra,

Have you tried the free practice CATs from Veritas and Princeton Review?

Having said that, I think you're ready for the test. You've been on BTG for 2.5 years, and you've made 1500+ posts. I've read many of these posts, and it's clear that you have the ability to score 730+

I say it's show time! :-)

Cheers and good luck,
Brent
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