need help with re-take strategy: 680 to 750 in 4 weeks

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Hi
Would appreciate some advice on what I should focus on over the next 30 days as I gear up for a re-take of my recent disappointing 680 (Q44, V39). It's a fine score but not at the schools I'm applying to, and is lower than ANY of my practice tests so I can't help thinking I had a bit of an off day. Here's some background on my practice tests (in chrono order):

3/10: GMAT Prep 750 (Q48, V46) - before I had taken any Manhattan GMAT courses or anything, just some OG prep, so this gave me some confidence and I decided to take a project that had me overseas for the past 6 months and didn't touch any GMAT prep until end of august.

8/31: MGMAT 630 (Q38, V37) - was just trying to reacclimate to test so wasn't concerned with score
9/19: MGMAT 710 (Q42, V45)
10/3: MGMAT (Q41 - didn't do the verbal section)
10/6: MGMAT 720 (Q43, V45)
10/8: MGMAT 690 (Q45, V39)
10/12:MGMAT 700 (Q44, V40)
10/13:GMAT Prep 720 (Q48, V41) - I took this on a decent hangover so felt pretty good about this really
10/14:GMAT Prep 770 (Q49, V47) - yes this was a re-set and re-take as my 3rd GMAT Prep test but I only recognized a few questions and gave myself a 2-min time penalty on those. I figured it wasn't very inflated if at all.

My scores just days before my exam coupled with the apparent consensus on these fora that the GMAT Prep software is the most accurate in scoring had me pretty confident I could get upwards of a 750 going in. I was a bit baffled at what went wrong once I saw the 680. My best guess is the following:

I scheduled a 8am test like an idiot: I do my best work after midnight but jumped on an open 8am slot. I was considering changing it up until the practice test 3days prior when I got a 770 while starting at 8am. Still, I can't help but think my brain wasn't fully awake yet and I've scheduled the next test later in the day.

I think I second-guessed my verbal and had right-to-wrong switches: I frankly thought I owned verbal on the actual test, noticing what I thought were some hard questions but never feeling stumped. I did not own it. I definitely stopped and re-read/thought twice about a lot of questions and probably went back and changed some answers and I know others on here have suggested that's a common cause of underperforming on the actual test. So that's my best guess.

There were definitely some quant questions I just didn't feel like I'd prepared for: I think these were primarily number properties questions.

Reflecting on the results, I can't help but think I had a bit of an off day but maybe also missed some signs that I wasn't in the range that I thought I was in. Maybe it turns out that I'm an outlier and my Manhattan GMAT scoring was a better indicator of actual performance than GMATPrep software was. I would REALLY appreciate some suggestions for how best to get into the 750 range in 4 weeks given I've already been through MGMAT strategy guides, much of the OG (though I'll continue to plow through it further). I think for starters I'm going to focus on:

'practicing like I play': doing all OG problems in 30-50 problem chunks, with a time limit, and guessing on those I don't get (instead of stopping and learning the hardest ones as I go along as I did in the past). Also taking all practice tests with writing and IR at the beginning as I only did that on ~half

Doing the other free practice tests available online: Kaplan, etc. as others have said that a broader set of practice tests was helpful and provided noticeably different problems than MGMAT.

Listening to key MGMAT class recordings: I did self-study and stuck to the books but maybe I'm missing some valuable color from the class recordings that I have access to.


If anyone has suggestions for how I can turn this thing around, it would by MUCH appreciated. I've seen others rave about the help they received on these boards and hope to have a success story to share in a month from now. Thanks, Ambrose.
Last edited by ambrose6 on Tue Oct 22, 2013 5:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
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by [email protected] » Mon Oct 21, 2013 7:58 pm
Hi ambrose6,

First off, a 680/Q44 is a solid score and it puts you in position to apply to any US school and have a reasonable chance of getting in. You've made a fairly accurate assessment of your situation, but I have some additional questions:

1) On what day did you take your actual GMAT?
2) What schools do you plan to apply to?
3) When do you plan to apply?

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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by ambrose6 » Tue Oct 22, 2013 5:19 am
Rich,

Thanks for the reply. In response to your questions:

1) Took my GMAT Thursday 10/17.
2) I plan to apply to Stanford, Harvard, and a toss up at the moment between Sloan, Columbia, and Wharton. My scores are well below the average as you know and I frankly always thought my GMAT would be a positive, not a negative, on my app so I feel like I have to give it another shot.
3) Applying Round 2 this year. Yes I know it's soon and was maybe overly confident that I could knock off the GMAT in one try and get going on apps now. Back in March I was planning on being ahead of the game and getting apps in in round 1, but as I said an opportunity came up that I just couldn't pass up and I had to sideline anything MBA-related for the past 6-8 mos.

Thanks in advance for any advice you have.

Ambrose

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by [email protected] » Tue Oct 22, 2013 11:45 am
HI Ambrose,

I've sent you a private message with some personal suggestions.

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by ambrose6 » Mon Nov 18, 2013 2:12 pm
Thanks all for the advice. Took it today and came out at 760 (Q49, V44). Given the help I think this board and others have provided figured the least I could do is give my own perspective of what worked better:

Preparation:
-spent more time since my first test reviewing wrongs and re-doing anything I got wrong until i understood it. I also mentally tried to tease out general themes for why I was getting things wrong and make the necessary adjustments. In general, spend less time answering new problems and more time reviewing wrong and/or slow problems.
-Covered all (content) bases - can't overemphasize the importance of this, at least for me. Before my first test, I had not done a single verbal study guide or problem outside of the practice tests. I realized too late (after my test) that my verbal scores were really inconsistent and I couldn't count on just having one of my good days on test day. So I actually spent some time with the hardest sentence correction and critical reasoning problems, and also made sure I eliminated all errors on medium/sub-700 questions.
-from an overall focus standpoint, the best advice I got over the whole GMAT experience was that verbal (for me) was worth way more than quant, the old 80%/80% hurdle isn't really true, and therefore rather than focusing on my weakness - Quant - I should make sure I aced verbal. Hands down the most helpful thing I heard the whole time (thanks manhattan gmat).
-Practiced as I played - every test was with writing and IR section, which I hadn't done previously.

Test day
-On my first test I think I wanted to be "extra sure" of every answer on the actual test. Horrible idea. Take the test just as you took the practice tests - don't second guess answers. It will only lead to time management issues and right-to-wrong switches.
- I scheduled the first one at 8am and I'm not a morning person. I also took an ambien the night before (anticipating that I'd be too nervous to sleep). I don't think either of those was a great idea. This time I took the test at noon and didn't take a pill the night before.
-I also don't discount that I took advantage of every break to eat a kind bar, drink caffeine, and splash cold water on my face. I felt fresh starting each new section. Do this.

Good luck to everyone - hopefully a 680 to 760 in 31 days story provides some inspiration to some.