Manhattan GMAT Complete Test Prep

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Manhattan GMAT Complete Test Prep

by aaisola » Tue Mar 27, 2012 7:38 pm
I just ordered the Manhattan GMAT Complete Test Prep package that comes with all 8 guides as well as the 3 OG guides, the two foundation books and the GMAT roadmap. I did a practice CAT today for which I will analyze my results tomorrow. I have 6 weeks until my GMAT and with all this material on hand I'm just trying to come up with some sort of syllabus or study plan to follow outlining what I should start with and do on a regular basis and so on. As you can imagine it's quite daunting given the amount of studying material I suddenly have on my hands. If you have any study plan you recommend I would appreciate it.
Thanks,
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by Whitney Garner » Wed Mar 28, 2012 11:04 am
aaisola wrote:I just ordered the Manhattan GMAT Complete Test Prep package that comes with all 8 guides as well as the 3 OG guides, the two foundation books and the GMAT roadmap. I did a practice CAT today for which I will analyze my results tomorrow. I have 6 weeks until my GMAT and with all this material on hand I'm just trying to come up with some sort of syllabus or study plan to follow outlining what I should start with and do on a regular basis and so on. As you can imagine it's quite daunting given the amount of studying material I suddenly have on my hands. If you have any study plan you recommend I would appreciate it.
Thanks,
Hi aaisola!

Believe me, I know how daunting our physical materials can be (I think our full set is up to 30+ pounds by now)!! There are as many different ways to approach this stuff as there are different GMAT test-takers so it will definitely depend on your review of your CAT. If you want to PM me your (real) name, I would be happy to take a quick look at your first CAT for you and give you a bit of tailored advice, but let me give you some general suggestions up front!

(1) Review Your CAT:
- You are looking for the biggest holes here. Is math the big need or is Verbal? Within these areas, what are the big content or question type holes. You want to address the biggest issues FIRST.

(2) Work on 1 quant chapter (pick the book that covers your biggest issue and do chapter 1 PLUS the EVEN InAction problems for that chapter - they are at the end of each chapter, I like to save the ODD problems to use as review later in the day or later in my study). Check the clock before you start and then again when you have completely finished reading the reviewing (if you need a break, note that and stop your timer). The idea is that you want to get a feel for about how long it takes you to work on a Quant chapter.
**Do the same for a SC/CR/RC chapter - we're trying to figure out, does it take you 2 hours to do a chapter+ questions, 4 hours, do you need to leave room for several breaks, etc.
**You DON'T want to keep pushing when you need a break, TAKE BREAKS and no matter what, take a break every 1.5-2.0 hours (of at least 20+ minutes).

(3) Get your calendar out and begin scheduling. This might be a sample schedule:

WORK DAYS - The plan is to do heavier work early in the morning before work or in the evening after work (assuming you work a typical 9-5 job). You will then Try to build in a couple of short study breaks of 15-20 minutes throughout the day (during a lunch break and right after work).
6:45-7:15am -> AM Study (30-45 minutes - read, review, practice sets, short chapters, 2 InAction problems from the chapter you read the night before, etc.)
(get ready/go to work)

12:00-12:15pm -> Mid Day Review/Short Set (1-2 problems)
(go take the rest of your lunch break)

6:00-6:15pm -> Practice Problems, Review/Short set right after work.
(have dinner, relax, spend time with friends/family)

8:15-9:45pm -> Do Longer projects (read a chapter, etc)
**Only do this "Long" session on 4 out of 5 work days - give yourself a night off!


WEEKEND (Non-work day): These are your days to have a few longer study sessions spaced out throughout the day.

7:30-8:30am -> Good morning Sprint - work on several exercises during this period - maybe divie it between quant drills and then some verbal practice (RC passage or a handful of SC/CR questions)
(now go enjoy your morning, shower, breakfast, coffee, exercise, socialize, etc for about 2-3 hours)

11:00am - 1:00pm -> Lunchtime Power Study - work on a long project here (read longer chapters, work on a practice CAT, do a long timed set of 20-30 - quant or verbal, etc.) This is going to be your BIG study session of the day so enjoy it!
(now go off and have a lovely and restful afternoon - pat yourself on the back, you've done a LOT of work this week!!)

5:30-6:15pm ->[ Pre-Dinner Drills - work on anything you read about that morning/afternoon, review questions you did earlier in the week, etc. You'll be amazed what you can fit into 45 minutes, but the time will just FLY by!!
(now the night is all yours, go out and have a good time with friends, family, pets or a good book!)

10:00-10:20pm BedTime Review - pick 1-2 InAction problems from the chapter you worked on earlier that day, or from a section that you know you need to keep reviewing)

*******
So this is a pretty manageable schedule and NOT something that will take over your life (make sure to give yourself plenty of down time and make sure that you're really trying to enjoy the time you have off (don't just surf the internet, get out from your desk, get out from in front of the TV, and go live life!!).

If you do this every day and take off 1 weeknight each week, you will be building in approximately 17 hours of study time each week!! And more importantly, you will be studying in small packets of time (better for understanding and stamina), reviewing material repeatedly throughout the day/week (infinitely better for retention and later application), and NOT GETTING BURNED OUT!!

It is only 6 weeks - you CAN commit to this for 6 weeks!! Grab the calendar, write down your dedicated study times and then start jotting down ideas for what you want to work on in each time period (plan this for about 3-4 days out and then re-evaluate and continue scheduling about 3-4 days out!

Good Luck!!
:)
Whit
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by aaisola » Sat Mar 31, 2012 7:50 am
Hi Whitney,
I was just wondering if you got my private message. Thanks once again for your help.

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by brightwinds » Sun Apr 01, 2012 9:37 am
Whitney obviously knows what she's talking about, and that's great. If you're looking for something a little more pre-canned to walk you through things, definitely think about signing up for the 60 day study guide. https://www.beatthegmat.com/mba/gmat-guide I used a variation on that to guide my studying, and it was extremely helpful while working through the quant. A lot of the material expects you to use the MGMAT set, so it's a great starting place.

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by aaisola » Wed Apr 11, 2012 2:01 pm
Hi,
I just did a Manhattan GMAT practice test the results of which are given below:

TYPE SCORE ESTIMATED PERCENTILE RANK
Quantitative 45 77 %
Verbal 42 96 %
Total 720 96 %

I'm slightly confused as to how I achieved an overall score of 720. This is because even though in Quant my percentile was 77% I somehow got a score of 45. I don't understand how with such a low percentile I achieved such a high score that then translated into an overall score of 720 and a percentile rank of 96%. Are these tests accurate and indicative of the actual GMAT? Please advise.

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by akhilsuhag » Fri Apr 13, 2012 1:43 am
Hi,

Your score reports are fine.

1. Quant and Verbal scores and percentiles don't correspond to each other. A 45 in Verbal is in the high 90% where as in Quant it is 77 as you got. So a quant 51 (which is the highest possible score) is equivalent to verbal 45/46. Don't ask why, the algorithm is just too complex and it is how it is :)

2. Verbal has a little more weight on your overall score and you individual percentiles will also never seem to correspond to your total percentile. It is like in Verbal you are better than 96% people, in Quant 77% but overall combining both skills you are better than 96%.

MGMAT tests are considered the best after GMATprep tests. So for an accurate picture take a GMATprep. MGMAT Quant is considered a little tougher than the actual GMAT. Overall I think if you can balance your scores, as schools look for 80+ percentile in both sections, it would be great for you.

If you are just starting your prep at 720 you can destroy the test, so go ahead and give it your best.

All the best!
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