Set my GMAT baseline (700) - Request help forming study plan

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Hi all,

I took the plunge today and took Practice Test #1 in official GMAT test software, and got a 700. Here's the breakdown:

Quant - 48
Verbal - 38
--Sentence Correction: 6 correct, 6 incorrect
--Critical Reasoning: 6 correct, 2 incorrect
--Reading Comprehension; 10 correct, 0 incorrect

Overall, I was very happy and exceeded my expectations - I was nervous I was going to get around 550, because I bombed problem solving diagnostic test in the Official GMAT Book (only got half of questions right). But, in hindsight I think that test was covering all the possible topics, whereas actual GMAT covers just a few.

Time was not an issue, I think I had 10 minutes left on quant and 15 minutes left on verbal.

So now I'd like to develop a study plan. Here's what I'm thinking:

Quant (two weeks) - I didn't notice any difference between Data Sufficiency and Problem Solving in terms of difficulty, so I think I need to focus on strategies for both, then just do lots of practice problems. The official GMAT guide has a general review on quant, but lacks strategies (or at least what I've read thus far), anyone know of a great resource for quant strategies? Frankly, I had a couple problems where I guessed lucky, so I want to develop my familiarity with how to approach these problems so I don't need to guess except in extreme situations!

Verbal General - I notice that the spread in terms of percentiles is much greater than with quant, so combining that with my lower verbal score indicates I should spend more time overall prepping for verbal.

Sentence Correction (two weeks) - By far this was my weakest section, but fortunately is probably the easiest to improve (since it's straightforward English rules). I've heard the Manhattan guide is good, so I'm thinking of getting that. Any other resources I should look into?

Critical Reasoning (one week) - This was pretty strong, but I missed a few. I know one was because I chose an answer based on something that wasn't mentioned in the text, so I learned my lesson. Really I'm not sure how much strategy you can have for this, since it's just logic, I'm thinking of reviewing basic strategy then just practicing problems.

Reading Comprehension (one week) - Obviously I did well here. In a similar setting, the ACT, I aced the Reading section (36), so I think this is a natural strength. I have my strategy down, but I'll still review any strategy in Official GMAT Guide, and do some practice problems.

In summary, I currently have the Official GMAT Book, and will work through that. In addition, I'm considering getting Kaplan's GMAT 2010 Premier Live, and Manhattan's guide to Sentence Correction. Then spend the next 6 or 8 weeks, mostly targeting quant and sentence completion.

Thoughts from people who've gone through test prep and the GMAT? My goal is to get 760+ (99th percentile): that score will help me get into the business school I want, as well as recruitment out of that business school. Thanks!
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by DanaJ » Thu Sep 10, 2009 12:58 am
Yeah you could use some more books, especially for quant... I understand MGMAT has a series of 5 guides, but I'm pretty sure that buying all 5 will be pretty expensive. Anyway, you don't need that much strategy, since you're already at a pretty decent level. I guess Kaplan Premier will do it for you. However, note that IMHO Kaplan's tips for CR are pretty weak. If you feel like getting high quality material on this front, go for the PowerScore CR Bible - it worked wonders for your truly (CR was my weakest point when I started, but in the final GMATprep before the exam I had 0 mistakes in this section).

I really can't recommend anything else except maybe work on some LSAT sets for intense RC and CR practice. I added two official ones here.

On a side note: I started with the same baseline score and ended up with a 770. Hope you do even better! Good luck!

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by cbenk121 » Thu Sep 10, 2009 7:21 pm
Thanks Dana! I just bought Manhattan SC, the CR Bible you recommended (to add some method to my mayhem of solving problems), and a Kaplan math book recommended by TwinnSplitter.

In your, and others opinion, how realistically difficult are the official practice exams? I read on an Amazon review that the GMAT has gotten more difficult since those tests were released, and I would hate to go light on my prep and get stunned on test day. Like I mentioned, I only got half of the diagnostic math problems right in OG 12, so I may end up buying MG set of 5 books to make sure I can not only duplicate my practice score, but exceed it :). (Although to be fair, in reviewing my missed answers in OG 12, most of them were stupid mistakes).

I'll check out those LSAT resources when I get to CR / RC, those look great.

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by DanaJ » Fri Sep 11, 2009 12:38 am
Actually, IMHO the GMATprep software is your closest thing to the real GMAT. I say this because GMATprep #2 was the last test I took before the big day and ended up with a 760, pretty close to my official score of 770. I'd say you should fully trust GMATprep and save one of your tests. If you take it like I did you'll have a pretty clear indicator of your official performance.