- Elad@Ready4GMAT
- Senior | Next Rank: 100 Posts
- Posts: 35
- Joined: Sat Jun 05, 2010 4:51 am
- Thanked: 53 times
- Followed by:34 members
Hi All.
Although I was mostly a silent observer in this forum, I followed and learned from many great members and tutors here (especially Ron). This is the 4th time I am taking the GMAT and, frankly speaking, I have no idea what went wrong (again). For me, I am kindda in a place where me and my close circle of friends and family (some supported me all the way, and some didn't) have the same feeling of letting it go. Probably going to a top 10 business school is not meant to be for me. I have worked really hard, and did everything that I could to beat the GMAT, without any success. Whenever I was down, whenever times were hard, whenever I didn't feel like studying, and whenever I doubted myself, I always saw the goal of getting accepted to a top 10 business school.
I want to share my story with you guys, and will appreciate any comment / thought. So this is how it goes:
Background: International, 29 years old, Engineer from the best technology institute in my country (not Indian), with 3+2 years of work experience in a well know American Corporates (Intel, GE).
My journey is long. I started to prepare for the GMAT less than 2 years ago. I am not going to detail my experience in the first 3 attempts, but just as a reference, here are some highlights:
09 December 2009 23 / 28% 46 / 75% 570 / 55% 5.0 / 56% - I didn't really study for this one. Only after, I understood the GMAT level of complexity.
27 October 2010 17 / 12% 49 / 86% 550 / 49% 5.0 / 56% - Studied for 3 months + took 1 month off of work and studied like crazy. Signed to Master GMAT course, Scored 680-740 on Manhattan exams, 700 & 660 on GMAT prep 1st try. I didn't sleep a minute a night before and was very anxious during exam. My Verbal score was very disappointing (especially after the long preparation I had). I didn't expect to get a high score considering what I've been through before and during the day, but 17 in the verbal!?? (wtf?). In retrospect, I should have canceled my score at the end.
27 December 2010 24 / 33% 50 / 93% 630 / 73% 5.5 / 77% - Signed up after a week off, and focused solely on the Verbal. I read tons of articles in nytimes and worked with SC99, GMAT prep questions. Was still anxious on the exam day, scored better, but still wasn't able to get near my scores on the simulation exams.
After the 3rd attempt, I thought that I can get accepted to a good school with 630. So, I've applied on the 2nd round to NYU, Columbia, Berkeley, and UCLA . Got an interview from UCLA, but eventually was dinged from all. Applied also to Booth on the 3rd round but was dinged as well.
So on July, I decided to study again for the GMAT, aiming to apply on the first rounds for 2012. So this is what I did in the past 2.5 months:
Obviously, my problem is with the Verbal section, so I decided to work solely on that. I read articles every day from multiple sources that were recommended by tutors. I was reading at least 1 hour a day articles from nytimes, science news, etc. I managed vocabulary document of the words I was not familiar with, and memorized them. At the same time, I signed up for Knewton on demand course that guaranteed 50 points or money back. I've read and heard many good things about Knewton, especially about their verbal strategies, plus, I needed to score at least 50 points more. I figured out that if it will work, with 680 (50 pts more), with my past experience, and with killer essays I will be able to get into a top school on the early decision or first round.
This time, in order not to not stress myself, I didn't schedule the exam date, but rather told myself that whenever I will feel ready, I will schedule a date. So, I hit the road. For a whole 1.5 months, I focused solely on the Verbal. Quant - I didn't do anything except quickly solving the mandatory Knewton HWs. I took GMAT Club math tests only when I wanted to exhaust myself before taking a Verbal test. I solved the 198 SC (twice, after reading Ron's explaination on every question in manhattangmat) and 98 CR from GMAT Prep. I solved all medium level RC from RC99, and also (usually wrong on the GMAT) most of the hard ones. I reviewed each and every question, and tried to extract takeaways (this is one of Ron's advises - write yourself a takeaway from each question). Redid every question I solved wrong. As for the simulation tests, since I was focusing solely on the Verbal, I didn't review the Quant section at all, so more time was available for me to review the verbal section. I logged into my errorlog every question I got wrong. Explained myself why it was right and why wrong. Sometimes I took a test in the morning and another verbal test later. After the first 3 GMATs, I assumed that my problem was time management, stress, and speed, so I wanted to get the feel for handling the entire Verbal section, without stressing out, and I wanted to master time management strategies. I was studying many hours a day and I guess one of the comments I will get here is that I was over-studying (which I have to agree, but I didn't feel that way).
I took the following tests:
Diagnostic GMAT 08/24/2011 at 01:12PM 49 31 670
Practice GMAT #1 08/25/2011 at 02:45PM 48 30 650
Practice GMAT #2 08/27/2011 at 10:28AM 49 37 710
Practice GMAT #3 08/28/2011 at 09:45AM 45 25 580
Practice GMAT #4 08/29/2011 at 01:45PM 45 30 620
Practice GMAT #5 09/01/2011 at 12:20PM 46 32 640
CAT EXAM #6A Completed 09/10/2011 V:36 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #5A Completed 09/07/2011 V:45 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #4A Completed 09/02/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #3A Completed 08/30/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #2A Completed 08/30/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #1A Completed 08/24/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
GMAT Club Test # correct # questions %correct
V02 28 41 68%
V03 28 41 68%
V04 26 41 63%
V05 29 41 71%
V06 30 40 75%
V99 25 32 75%
Kaplan free diagnostic test (full with essays) 09/06/2011 720 Q:99%, V:93%
GMAT Prep 720 (retake 2 days before the actual exam. Each question that I was familiar with, I read thoroughly and explained why the right answer is right and why the others are wrong).
Knewton course was very good, and it basically changed my approach to tackle SCs: meaning and sentence structure are crucial to solve the question! So, armed with that, I felt very confident to solve most SC. I still had a little trouble with questions that everything was underlined, or with questions that only one word was underlined, but even in those I was still able to nail most of them. With CR, which was my weakness, I used Powerscore CR bible. At first, I solved many but my performance fluctuated a lot and I couldn't nail medium and hard questions. But after reading one of the fabulous advices by Ron Purewal, who recommended to write your own parallel logic question for each wrong CR, I started to understand deeply every question and turned CR into my strength. As for the RC, my approach was to read the whole passage in 2-4 minutes (short one 2-3, long one ~4), create a MAP in my head and verify my answer against the passage, mainly after paraphrasing (whenever possible). I was never able to master RC, but managed to perform well (70-80% correct). Inference and application questions were always harder for me.
A day before the test, I just reviewed my formula sheets in the morning, but didn't do more than that. I spent the day with my friend, and later went out to see a movie with my wife. I slept pretty good a night before, woke up, ate something light for breakfast, was a bit nervous but felt like this is my day. Solved some questions to warm up my mind, ate some pasta and left to the test center at 11:00. Arrived at 11:30. My test was scheduled to start at 12:00. I finished the AWA, but felt like it didn't go very smoothly. Maybe I spent too much energy on it. Took the a break. Ate some raisins, drank some water, felt that I am in focus and started the Quant section. Until question 30 it went pretty smoothly, maybe except for a question that I had to make an educated guess after 4 min. Most questions I double checked, and this probably slowed me down. On question 30, I saw that I've left with 12-13 min. Usually I finish the Quant at least 2-3 min before, so I started to hurry up. Then 2-3 questions didn't go very well, and I rushed though another DS. Lastly, I had to guess the last one question because I was left with no time. When I finished the Quant, I knew it wasn't my best one, but I told myself that this was not what's important. Now it's money time, and this is what I've been working for in the past 1.5 months, so let's nail the Verbal section. I took the 8 min break. Went to the restroom. Drank coffee. Ate some chocolate and raisins, and went in with a feeling of cracking in the section. Started well, and did the first 5 questions in ~ 8 min. My time strategy is to check every 5 questions the time. I was ahead and felt like I knew exactly the answers. At this point I got a hard RC that took me forever, and I wasn't sure in any of my answers. After that, I got some SCs that again I solved without much confidence in my answers. I debated between 2 answers always. SC format were very different from the ones I've encountered during my studying. In most CRs I felt that I know the answers, except for one that was very hard to understand. Instead of guessing and moving on, I spent ~2 min trying to solve it. After 2 min, I realized I was still unable to understand and not really in focus, so I just guessed and moved on (~ question 20). In question 30 I've left with 17 min, 4 min behind my time strategy. I decided not to guess a question but rather hurry a bit up. So I rushed a bit through the last 11 questions. Question 36 turned out to be another RC, when I had 7 minutes left. I was stressed out. For the last 2 questions I left with 1 min. CR came first, so I tried to solve it quickly, but was too nervous to focus. And no time was left for the last SC. At the end of the exam, I was trying to evaluate my performance in the Verbal. I felt that I did OK, not the best. For sure better than the previous tests, but didn't get to the 40 level. I expected 30-35. But when I clicked on "Yes" to see my score, it came like a big shock to me! So many feelings and thoughts went through my head: surprise, disappointment, self doubt, angriness, and the feeling of giving up (which is the worst).
Members of the forum, can you please advice how to continue?
Is there a point to take the GMAT for the 5th time or is it time to let go?
What am I doing wrong? Do I have a problem with my knowledge or with my performance on the actual test?
And why do I feel on the actual exam that the questions are significantly different from the ones I am practicing at home (maybe except for the official ones, but these are somehow easier).
I will appreciate any comment.
Thanks
Although I was mostly a silent observer in this forum, I followed and learned from many great members and tutors here (especially Ron). This is the 4th time I am taking the GMAT and, frankly speaking, I have no idea what went wrong (again). For me, I am kindda in a place where me and my close circle of friends and family (some supported me all the way, and some didn't) have the same feeling of letting it go. Probably going to a top 10 business school is not meant to be for me. I have worked really hard, and did everything that I could to beat the GMAT, without any success. Whenever I was down, whenever times were hard, whenever I didn't feel like studying, and whenever I doubted myself, I always saw the goal of getting accepted to a top 10 business school.
I want to share my story with you guys, and will appreciate any comment / thought. So this is how it goes:
Background: International, 29 years old, Engineer from the best technology institute in my country (not Indian), with 3+2 years of work experience in a well know American Corporates (Intel, GE).
My journey is long. I started to prepare for the GMAT less than 2 years ago. I am not going to detail my experience in the first 3 attempts, but just as a reference, here are some highlights:
09 December 2009 23 / 28% 46 / 75% 570 / 55% 5.0 / 56% - I didn't really study for this one. Only after, I understood the GMAT level of complexity.
27 October 2010 17 / 12% 49 / 86% 550 / 49% 5.0 / 56% - Studied for 3 months + took 1 month off of work and studied like crazy. Signed to Master GMAT course, Scored 680-740 on Manhattan exams, 700 & 660 on GMAT prep 1st try. I didn't sleep a minute a night before and was very anxious during exam. My Verbal score was very disappointing (especially after the long preparation I had). I didn't expect to get a high score considering what I've been through before and during the day, but 17 in the verbal!?? (wtf?). In retrospect, I should have canceled my score at the end.
27 December 2010 24 / 33% 50 / 93% 630 / 73% 5.5 / 77% - Signed up after a week off, and focused solely on the Verbal. I read tons of articles in nytimes and worked with SC99, GMAT prep questions. Was still anxious on the exam day, scored better, but still wasn't able to get near my scores on the simulation exams.
After the 3rd attempt, I thought that I can get accepted to a good school with 630. So, I've applied on the 2nd round to NYU, Columbia, Berkeley, and UCLA . Got an interview from UCLA, but eventually was dinged from all. Applied also to Booth on the 3rd round but was dinged as well.
So on July, I decided to study again for the GMAT, aiming to apply on the first rounds for 2012. So this is what I did in the past 2.5 months:
Obviously, my problem is with the Verbal section, so I decided to work solely on that. I read articles every day from multiple sources that were recommended by tutors. I was reading at least 1 hour a day articles from nytimes, science news, etc. I managed vocabulary document of the words I was not familiar with, and memorized them. At the same time, I signed up for Knewton on demand course that guaranteed 50 points or money back. I've read and heard many good things about Knewton, especially about their verbal strategies, plus, I needed to score at least 50 points more. I figured out that if it will work, with 680 (50 pts more), with my past experience, and with killer essays I will be able to get into a top school on the early decision or first round.
This time, in order not to not stress myself, I didn't schedule the exam date, but rather told myself that whenever I will feel ready, I will schedule a date. So, I hit the road. For a whole 1.5 months, I focused solely on the Verbal. Quant - I didn't do anything except quickly solving the mandatory Knewton HWs. I took GMAT Club math tests only when I wanted to exhaust myself before taking a Verbal test. I solved the 198 SC (twice, after reading Ron's explaination on every question in manhattangmat) and 98 CR from GMAT Prep. I solved all medium level RC from RC99, and also (usually wrong on the GMAT) most of the hard ones. I reviewed each and every question, and tried to extract takeaways (this is one of Ron's advises - write yourself a takeaway from each question). Redid every question I solved wrong. As for the simulation tests, since I was focusing solely on the Verbal, I didn't review the Quant section at all, so more time was available for me to review the verbal section. I logged into my errorlog every question I got wrong. Explained myself why it was right and why wrong. Sometimes I took a test in the morning and another verbal test later. After the first 3 GMATs, I assumed that my problem was time management, stress, and speed, so I wanted to get the feel for handling the entire Verbal section, without stressing out, and I wanted to master time management strategies. I was studying many hours a day and I guess one of the comments I will get here is that I was over-studying (which I have to agree, but I didn't feel that way).
I took the following tests:
Diagnostic GMAT 08/24/2011 at 01:12PM 49 31 670
Practice GMAT #1 08/25/2011 at 02:45PM 48 30 650
Practice GMAT #2 08/27/2011 at 10:28AM 49 37 710
Practice GMAT #3 08/28/2011 at 09:45AM 45 25 580
Practice GMAT #4 08/29/2011 at 01:45PM 45 30 620
Practice GMAT #5 09/01/2011 at 12:20PM 46 32 640
CAT EXAM #6A Completed 09/10/2011 V:36 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #5A Completed 09/07/2011 V:45 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #4A Completed 09/02/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #3A Completed 08/30/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #2A Completed 08/30/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
CAT EXAM #1A Completed 08/24/2011 V:41 (Took GMAT Club Math test before)
GMAT Club Test # correct # questions %correct
V02 28 41 68%
V03 28 41 68%
V04 26 41 63%
V05 29 41 71%
V06 30 40 75%
V99 25 32 75%
Kaplan free diagnostic test (full with essays) 09/06/2011 720 Q:99%, V:93%
GMAT Prep 720 (retake 2 days before the actual exam. Each question that I was familiar with, I read thoroughly and explained why the right answer is right and why the others are wrong).
Knewton course was very good, and it basically changed my approach to tackle SCs: meaning and sentence structure are crucial to solve the question! So, armed with that, I felt very confident to solve most SC. I still had a little trouble with questions that everything was underlined, or with questions that only one word was underlined, but even in those I was still able to nail most of them. With CR, which was my weakness, I used Powerscore CR bible. At first, I solved many but my performance fluctuated a lot and I couldn't nail medium and hard questions. But after reading one of the fabulous advices by Ron Purewal, who recommended to write your own parallel logic question for each wrong CR, I started to understand deeply every question and turned CR into my strength. As for the RC, my approach was to read the whole passage in 2-4 minutes (short one 2-3, long one ~4), create a MAP in my head and verify my answer against the passage, mainly after paraphrasing (whenever possible). I was never able to master RC, but managed to perform well (70-80% correct). Inference and application questions were always harder for me.
A day before the test, I just reviewed my formula sheets in the morning, but didn't do more than that. I spent the day with my friend, and later went out to see a movie with my wife. I slept pretty good a night before, woke up, ate something light for breakfast, was a bit nervous but felt like this is my day. Solved some questions to warm up my mind, ate some pasta and left to the test center at 11:00. Arrived at 11:30. My test was scheduled to start at 12:00. I finished the AWA, but felt like it didn't go very smoothly. Maybe I spent too much energy on it. Took the a break. Ate some raisins, drank some water, felt that I am in focus and started the Quant section. Until question 30 it went pretty smoothly, maybe except for a question that I had to make an educated guess after 4 min. Most questions I double checked, and this probably slowed me down. On question 30, I saw that I've left with 12-13 min. Usually I finish the Quant at least 2-3 min before, so I started to hurry up. Then 2-3 questions didn't go very well, and I rushed though another DS. Lastly, I had to guess the last one question because I was left with no time. When I finished the Quant, I knew it wasn't my best one, but I told myself that this was not what's important. Now it's money time, and this is what I've been working for in the past 1.5 months, so let's nail the Verbal section. I took the 8 min break. Went to the restroom. Drank coffee. Ate some chocolate and raisins, and went in with a feeling of cracking in the section. Started well, and did the first 5 questions in ~ 8 min. My time strategy is to check every 5 questions the time. I was ahead and felt like I knew exactly the answers. At this point I got a hard RC that took me forever, and I wasn't sure in any of my answers. After that, I got some SCs that again I solved without much confidence in my answers. I debated between 2 answers always. SC format were very different from the ones I've encountered during my studying. In most CRs I felt that I know the answers, except for one that was very hard to understand. Instead of guessing and moving on, I spent ~2 min trying to solve it. After 2 min, I realized I was still unable to understand and not really in focus, so I just guessed and moved on (~ question 20). In question 30 I've left with 17 min, 4 min behind my time strategy. I decided not to guess a question but rather hurry a bit up. So I rushed a bit through the last 11 questions. Question 36 turned out to be another RC, when I had 7 minutes left. I was stressed out. For the last 2 questions I left with 1 min. CR came first, so I tried to solve it quickly, but was too nervous to focus. And no time was left for the last SC. At the end of the exam, I was trying to evaluate my performance in the Verbal. I felt that I did OK, not the best. For sure better than the previous tests, but didn't get to the 40 level. I expected 30-35. But when I clicked on "Yes" to see my score, it came like a big shock to me! So many feelings and thoughts went through my head: surprise, disappointment, self doubt, angriness, and the feeling of giving up (which is the worst).
Members of the forum, can you please advice how to continue?
Is there a point to take the GMAT for the 5th time or is it time to let go?
What am I doing wrong? Do I have a problem with my knowledge or with my performance on the actual test?
And why do I feel on the actual exam that the questions are significantly different from the ones I am practicing at home (maybe except for the official ones, but these are somehow easier).
I will appreciate any comment.
Thanks


















