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Everything You Need To Know About Time Management (Part 2)

by , Jun 22, 2011

In the first part of this series (you can read Part 1 here), we discussed time positions (positive, negative, and neutral) and addressed our first three major considerations for timing:

 

  1. understanding the scoring (and what implications that has for timing)
  2. per-question timing and tracking your work
  3. reflecting on your results so that you can improve

If you havent already read the first part, do so now before you continue with this article. Today, were going to talk about our final three major timing strategies.

(4) Develop your 1 minute sense

While keeping a single-problem time log will help you become aware of your pacing on all question types, you cant check the clock after every problem on the real test. Youll drive yourself crazy before the test is over! What to do, then?

What were going to do is develop a time sense so that we can make appropriate, timely decisions as we move through the test. Lets talk first about why and how we use this time sense; then, well talk about what we need to do in order to develop it.

WHY are we developing a 1-minute sense?

One of the key timeframes on this test is the 1-minute mark on a question. For quant, CR, and some RC questions, this represents the halfway point, and there are particular things that we need to have accomplished by that time in order to have a reasonable shot at finishing the question correctly in 2 minutes. For SC and some RC questions, the 1-minute mark represents the wrapping-up point we should be close to done with the problem.

For two minute questions (quant, CR, and Except or Roman Numeral RC), we spend the first minute actively trying to get to the right answer. By the 1 minute mark, we need to be on track. This means that we need to know what were doing, have a very good idea of what else needs to happen in the second minute, and have confidence that were capable of doing that work. If were not on track at the 1 minute mark, then we need to move from our best strategy (trying to find the right answer) to our second-best strategy (trying to find wrong answers). We spend up to 1 more minute eliminating wrong answers, then we guess and move on.

Note: when youre on track, theres no question in your mind. If I were to interrupt you on such a question and ask whether you were on track, youd tell me, yes, I am, dont interrupt me! If you are thinking, Well, I know this part over here Im not totally sure where thats going, but with a little more time, Im sure No. Stop. You are not on track.

For most other questions (SC and general or main idea RC questions), the 1-minute mark is almost the times up mark. If youre getting that 1-minute feeling and youre not on track, guess from among the remaining answers and move on. (Do not spend time trying to figure out how to guess at this point times already up.)

Finally, for normal specific detail and inference RC questions (not Except or Roman Numeral), our expected timeframe is about 1.5 minutes. When you get that 1-minute feeling and arent on track, start to eliminate more aggressively. You have a little time to decide what to eliminate, but you cant spend up to another minute on these.

HOW do we develop a 1-minute sense?

You need access to a stop watch (physical or electronic) that has lap timing capability. (Most electronic stopwatches will do this; only some physical stopwatches will.) When using lap timing, pushing the lap button will not stop the stopwatch; rather, it will mark the time at which you pushed the button, but the stopwatch itself will keep running. You can push the lap button multiple times, and the timer will record all of the times at which you pushed the button while continuing to run.

Set yourself up with a set of 5 or 10 quant or CR practice problems. (Its best to practice this with 2-minute questions to start.) Start your timer and cover it up so that you cant see what it says (but still give yourself access to the lap button). Dive into the first problem; when you think its been about a minute since you began, push that lap button. When youre done with the problem, push the lap button again. Start your second problem; when you think its been about a minute since you began, push that lap button. When youre done, push the button again. Keep repeating this process until youre done with your set. (Note: if youre done with the question before you think it has been a minute, check your work. If you were really that fast, you have the time to check, right? Make sure you didnt make a careless mistake simply due to speed. While checking your work, still push that button when you think it has been a minute since you started in the first place.)

Now, go back and look at the data. For the 1-minute part, anything between 45 seconds and 1 minute 15 seconds is good. Anything outside of that range is too fast or too slow. Note your tendencies and, tomorrow, adjust accordingly when you do your next set of problems. Most people find it takes three to four weeks of regular practice with this in order to develop a time sense that is reasonably accurate most of the time.

Note: you can also train yourself when youre doing anything that requires extended mental concentration, even if its not GMAT-related. Have to write up a report or memo for work or do some research? Set up your timer and push the button every minute until youve pushed it ten times. Then check your data.

Once your time sense is relatively reliable, you can start to implement your am I on track? and if not, Im moving on, or Im moving to guessing strategy. This also requires you to know how to make good educated guesses, of course. Check out these two articles for help: Educated Guessing on Quant and Educated Guessing on Verbal.

(5) Transition to Benchmarks

You probably noted that our timing is still a bit loose above; we might finish one 2-minute question in only 1.5 minutes, and another in 2.5 minutes. Thats fine, as long as we are generally spending long enough (at least 1 minute) to minimize careless mistakes and yet not too long (more than 2.5 minutes) so that we dont take time away from other questions.

On a full test or test section, its best to monitor time using Benchmarks. There are several ways to do this; try these out and use the one that works best for you.

Method 1: Checking the clock at certain times to see whether youre on the right question (all question ranges assume + / - 1 question; that is, youre okay if youre within 1 question of the expected range):

Method 2: Checking the question number at certain points to see whether youve used the right amount of time (all times assume + / - 2 minutes; that is, youre okay if youre within 2 minutes on either side); Note: check after finishing the listed question:

Method 3 (quant only): Doing a little math to calculate your position. Heres how it works: Glance at the question number. Multiply that number by 2. Subtract the resulting number from 75. Now look at the clock. Are you within 2 minutes of that number?

For example, Im on question 11. Multiplying by 2 gives me 22. 75 22 = 53. If the timer says 51 to 55 minutes left, Im okay; if the timer is outside of that range, Im going too quickly or too slowly.

Note that the time block for method 1 is 15 minutes and the time block for method 2 is 20 minutes. As you progress in your studies, you can begin to set up 15-minute or 20-minute blocks of practice questions and do mini tests to start practicing the timing in a block. (Use the per-question timing averages to determine how many questions you should have in a 15-minute or 20-minute block.)

(6) Know how to recover from bad timing

Okay, everything weve talked about so far has focused on what we do want to do. What do we do if things get off track? There are two levels to this: what to do immediately during an actual testing / timed situation, and what to do during your study afterward, before you take another test.

What to do during a test

As soon as you notice a timing problem, you need to start dealing with it. Dont ignore it and assume it will get better later; most likely, it will only get worse.

First, heres how you know youre going too slowly:

Method 1: you are more than one question lower than the expected range for that timeframe. For example, you check the clock at 45 minutes to go on quant, and you are on question 12. Youre supposed to be on question 14 or 15. Youre 2 questions away; you need to take action.

Method 2: you are more than 2 minutes slower than the expected time. For instance, you check the clock after finishing question 20 on verbal, and you have 33 minutes left. Youre supposed to have around 37 minutes left, so youve lost 4 minutes. Again, you need to take action.

Method 3 (quant only): works like method 2, above.

You are going to need to sacrifice something in order to get back on track; you dont have a choice about that. You do have a choice about what you sacrifice and there are better and worse choices you can make. Do NOT sacrifice things you know how to do. Dont tell yourself that youll do this question 30 seconds faster because you already know how to do it, so you can just speed up. Youre risking a careless mistake on a question that you know how to get right, plus youre going to have to do that on several questions to make up the 2 minutes that youre behind, so youre really giving yourself a chance to miss multiple questions that you know how to do.

Instead, the very next time you see a question that you know is a weakness of yours, skip it. Make an immediate, random guess and move on. There youve only sacrificed one question, and it was a weakness anyway. Depending upon the question type and how quickly you moved on, you saved anywhere from a little under 1 minute to a little under 2 minutes. If thats enough to catch back up, great. If not, repeat this behavior until you are caught back up. Dont worry if you see two big weakness questions in a row. Maybe you got lucky and got that first one right. Maybe one is an experimental. Even if they both count, getting two wrong in a row wont kill your score you can recover because you still have more questions to come and youre not sure that you couldve gotten them right anyway, because they were weaknesses.

What about going too quickly? We can tell in the same way except the data is the opposite of what it was above. For method 1, you are more than one question higher than the expected range for that timeframe so youre on a higher question number than expected. For methods 2 and 3, you are more than 2 minutes faster than the expected time so you have more time left on the clock than expected.

In this case, you do need to slow down a bit, because you might be making careless mistakes simply due to speed. Make sure youre writing everything down. Check your work on the questions that you know you know how to do. (On the ones you absolutely dont know how to do, though, just go ahead and move on you dont need to spend more time on those.) Use your 1-minute sense! If you're ready to move on before it's been about a minute (and you think you got it right), now would be a great time to check your work.

Okay, the test is over, and you realize that you messed up the timing. Now what? Now you go all the way back to the beginning of this article and start practicing all of the things we discussed until youre better able to balance your timing throughout a test section (and note that this can take weeks and even months, depending upon how severe your timing problems are and whether they are also related to holes in your content knowledge and skills).

That was a lot of stuff!

Heres a summary of our major tasks:

  1. Understand how the scoring works
  2. Know your per-question time constraints and track your work
  3. Reflect on your results
  4. Develop your 1 minute sense
  5. Transition to Benchmarks
  6. Know how to recover from bad timing

Now go get started!