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MastermindExcello
- Newbie | Next Rank: 10 Posts
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Mon Nov 16, 2009 7:16 am
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Took the GMAT 2 days ago, so haven't received the AWA score yet.
In roughly the order I tackled them over the course of 2 months:
Princeton Review Crack the GMAT - a good intro for me
CliffsTestPrep GMAT (8th Ed) - not highly recommended, but okay practice
ManhattanGMATPrep Fractions, Decimals & Percents - skip
ManhattanGMATPrep Sentence Correction - highly recommended
McGraw-Hill's GMAT - same as CliffsTest
9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th Edition Official Guides - Most useful practice
4 weeks before the GMAT: 650 (online Princeton Review CAT #1)
3 weeks before the GMAT: 640 (online Princeton Review CAT #2)
2 weeks before the GMAT: ~690
1 week before the GMAT: 750 on GMATPrep CAT #1
3 days before the GMAT: 730 on GMATPrep CAT #2
2 days before GMAT: reviewed question-types I was struggling with (Data Sufficiency and Sentence Correction)
1 day before GMAT: Ate healthy, light review of flash cards, NO PRACTICE, rest, exercise
I don't really have a long story to share, but I'd say the key for me turned out to be analyzing which types of questions I struggled with and then redoubling my concentration whenever I saw them appear in practice. It definitely took some time for me to calm down and not rush through the test. If I came across a question that seemed difficult, I just took a deep breath and took the time to think it out. It meant I might have to rush on other questions, but the gamble seemed to work out in my favor at the end.
In roughly the order I tackled them over the course of 2 months:
Princeton Review Crack the GMAT - a good intro for me
CliffsTestPrep GMAT (8th Ed) - not highly recommended, but okay practice
ManhattanGMATPrep Fractions, Decimals & Percents - skip
ManhattanGMATPrep Sentence Correction - highly recommended
McGraw-Hill's GMAT - same as CliffsTest
9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th Edition Official Guides - Most useful practice
4 weeks before the GMAT: 650 (online Princeton Review CAT #1)
3 weeks before the GMAT: 640 (online Princeton Review CAT #2)
2 weeks before the GMAT: ~690
1 week before the GMAT: 750 on GMATPrep CAT #1
3 days before the GMAT: 730 on GMATPrep CAT #2
2 days before GMAT: reviewed question-types I was struggling with (Data Sufficiency and Sentence Correction)
1 day before GMAT: Ate healthy, light review of flash cards, NO PRACTICE, rest, exercise
I don't really have a long story to share, but I'd say the key for me turned out to be analyzing which types of questions I struggled with and then redoubling my concentration whenever I saw them appear in practice. It definitely took some time for me to calm down and not rush through the test. If I came across a question that seemed difficult, I just took a deep breath and took the time to think it out. It meant I might have to rush on other questions, but the gamble seemed to work out in my favor at the end.












