hi
I am writin GMAT in 7-8 weeks time. I felt that verbal and more specifically Sentence correction part was my weakness. But then when i started preparing for CR. i felt I had problems in it also.
My question is how shud the preparation strategy go when you have multiple weaknesses ( basically in Verbal). In verbal you have RC , CR and SC.
I had worked on SC for abt 2-3 weeks till i was confident enough in it. But then in GMAT you have all these coming up one after another depending on how your performance is going.
so is it worthy to prepare them one at a time, or if anybody can suggest a different startegy to counter this thing.
Please let me know.
KK
how to prepare
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Hi KK:krishnakanthpps wrote:hi
I am writin GMAT in 7-8 weeks time. I felt that verbal and more specifically Sentence correction part was my weakness. But then when i started preparing for CR. i felt I had problems in it also.
My question is how shud the preparation strategy go when you have multiple weaknesses ( basically in Verbal). In verbal you have RC , CR and SC.
I had worked on SC for abt 2-3 weeks till i was confident enough in it. But then in GMAT you have all these coming up one after another depending on how your performance is going.
so is it worthy to prepare them one at a time, or if anybody can suggest a different startegy to counter this thing.
Please let me know.
KK
One concern I had when I was studying for the GMAT was: I would devote a solid 2-3 weeks mastering one area of the GMAT, like SC. Then, when I moved on to study another area of the GMAT for 2-3 weeks, I would be afraid that I would start forgetting the material I had learned previously.
Here's my suggested strategy:
I think that it is correct to devote 2-3 weeks to a single subject (like SC), then move on to another subject for 2-3 weeks, and so forth. To stay fresh on the material you learned previously, be sure to do 10 practice problems from OG for the previous subject(s) you had covered. Thus, your study strategy could look something like this:
- First two weeks: SC
- Second two weeks: CR, and 10 SC questions each day
- Third two weeks: RC, and 10 SC questions and 10 CR questions each day
- etc.
If you have time, I encourage you to read through my blog: https://beatthegmat.blocked. You can read how I implemented this exact strategy during my own GMAT prep.
Also, I recommend that you read this post. The strategy I outlined above was his originally, and I adapted it to my own prep.
Best of luck!
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