Verbal - 45 (98%)
Quant - 49 (87%)
Total - 760 (99%)
Studied for three weeks about three hours a day, five days a week (work in IBD, barely have time to sleep let alone study). I used Kaplan books and took one actual CAT after the first week and got a 710; did not take another full practice test before the exam. The two main takeaways from my studying experience for those on accelerated timeframes:
"¢ Most important - Take the diagnostic exam seriously before you start studying; you can save an enormous amount of time if you figure out what you need to work on before you start studying. Too many people just study everything and spend months rehashing topics that they are fairly strong in without devoting the proper attention to the ones in which they are lacking. Targeted studying is efficient studying.
"¢ If you are a native English speaker with fairly strong grammar / basic language proficiency, I would honestly not study verbal at all outside of familiarizing yourself with annoying technical things (e.g. who vs. whom usage)
If you have all the time in the world, then study to your heart's content; although, diminishing returns will occur pretty quickly and I firmly believe that if you study too much, you'll actually start experiencing negative returns at some point. I don't consider myself to be a genius at all. The last math class I took was BC Calc in high school and I was an Econ / Finance major at a strong liberal arts school in the Southeast.
Develop a plan, figure out what you need to study, and do it.
Quant - 49 (87%)
Total - 760 (99%)
Studied for three weeks about three hours a day, five days a week (work in IBD, barely have time to sleep let alone study). I used Kaplan books and took one actual CAT after the first week and got a 710; did not take another full practice test before the exam. The two main takeaways from my studying experience for those on accelerated timeframes:
"¢ Most important - Take the diagnostic exam seriously before you start studying; you can save an enormous amount of time if you figure out what you need to work on before you start studying. Too many people just study everything and spend months rehashing topics that they are fairly strong in without devoting the proper attention to the ones in which they are lacking. Targeted studying is efficient studying.
"¢ If you are a native English speaker with fairly strong grammar / basic language proficiency, I would honestly not study verbal at all outside of familiarizing yourself with annoying technical things (e.g. who vs. whom usage)
If you have all the time in the world, then study to your heart's content; although, diminishing returns will occur pretty quickly and I firmly believe that if you study too much, you'll actually start experiencing negative returns at some point. I don't consider myself to be a genius at all. The last math class I took was BC Calc in high school and I was an Econ / Finance major at a strong liberal arts school in the Southeast.
Develop a plan, figure out what you need to study, and do it.












