New to the Forum - Study plan and first practice test

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Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
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Hey everybody, I just joined the forum today, and wanted to say I'm looking forward to working with everybody so we can conquer the GMAT. Last week, I picked up the OG 11, OG Verbal Review, OG Math Review, and PR Cracking the GMAT. I was using the PR book mostly for its general strategies (POE on Data Sufficiency, Plugging in, etc.) but only doing practice problems from the Official Guide. So far I have gone through the medium difficulty problems on both Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency, but have not yet attemped the difficult problems. I have not started on any of the verbal sections either.

I went into the office yesterday to attempt my first online practice test. I decided to try the PR CAT 1 test, since it was free with the book I purchased. I have heard these tests tend to inflate score slightly, but thought it'd be good practice. My score wasn't exactly what I was hoping for (620; 36Q; 40V) but I still have 8 weeks to prepare before my scheduled test date. With that said, I have confidence I can really boos that verbal score up, as I haven't started preparing yet and still did okay. But, the math section is worrying me a little.

Last night I went over to Barnes and Noble with the intention of picking up the Manhattan Math books. But, the price ($40 for each of the two books) helped me decide to do my research first. Which leads me to the questions I have for those of you who have more experience with the study materials than I do:

1. Which books are the best to get those difficult math problems down pat? Again, I haven't practiced the difficult ones yet, but I'm still wondering which book teaches the best techniques. The PR has some decent short cuts, but those aren't very effective for the difficult problems. After all, I have to be a bit suspect when they're recommending I never choose certain letter responses for difficult problems, since that's what the "average" test taker would do. Will simply going through the OG 11, OG Math Review, and maybe the Kaplan 800 get me toward mastering this section? I'm wondering if it's less about technique and more about exposure to many many different types of difficult problems.

2. I can guess it's recommended to take as many practice tests as possible before the exam. However, are there certain companies to avoid? I've heard PR are easier than the actual GMAT, Kaplan are harder, and the others fall somewhere in between. Ideally, I would like to take about 6-8 practice tests before sitting for the real thing.

Thanks everybody, and again, I'm looking forward to hearing everybody's good news as your test scores start rolling in!
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by mayonnai5e » Wed Mar 26, 2008 1:55 am
First off, welcome to the forum. There are a lot of resources here to help you prepare for the exam. Secondly, apologies for the late response. Thirdly, you have written a lot of information here with a lot of questions - Tip: you'll have a much higher chance of getting well thought out responses quickly if you narrow the focus of your questions and posts so that other members and moderators can answer it succinctly (often times before I've even finished reading long posts I lose track of the original concern). From what I've gathered from you post you are looking for basic guidance on cats, study plans and materials. Please see this post for more information:

https://www.beatthegmat.com/study-plan-t ... t9447.html
https://www.beatthegmat.com/my-blog-erro ... t4899.html
550 =\ ...560 =\... 650 =) ...570 =( ...540 =*( ...680 =P ... 670 =T ...=T... 650 =T ...700 =) ..690 =) ...710 =D ...GMAT 720 DING!! ;D

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Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
Posts: 20
Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2008 11:38 am

by MeddlingKid » Thu Mar 27, 2008 6:20 am
Thank you for the links. I reviewed them last night, and established a study plan for the next 7 weeks before the exam. (I have already been studying for 2 weeks, so my total study period will be 10 weeks).

According to my schedule, I will dedicate approximately 165 hours of preparation time before the exam, and take 10 practice CATs. The books used will be OG 11, OG Quant Review, OG Verb Review, Kaplan 800, Kaplan Premium, MGMAT Sent. Corr., MGMAT Math Guides (or the turbocharge book; still deciding).

Again, thank you for the information. It was very helpful.

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by mayonnai5e » Thu Mar 27, 2008 8:46 am
One suggestion that really helped me focus during my practice was to count up the total number of problems you want to do. The OG materials alone have 1400 unique problems!

If you assume 2 mins to do the question + 3 minutes on average to review the solution (some questions take 1 minute because you completely 100% understood it others take 10 because you really need to learn a lot) that's already 7000 minutes (117 hours) of prep time dedicated solely to reviewing official material. That doesn't include the hours doing cats and reviewing cats and other activities. Plan according and cut out material/cats if you absolutely need to.

Oh and I'm glad you found what you needed.
https://www.beatthegmat.com/my-blog-erro ... t4899.html
550 =\ ...560 =\... 650 =) ...570 =( ...540 =*( ...680 =P ... 670 =T ...=T... 650 =T ...700 =) ..690 =) ...710 =D ...GMAT 720 DING!! ;D

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Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
Posts: 20
Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2008 11:38 am

by MeddlingKid » Thu Mar 27, 2008 10:25 am
So you recommend reviewing the responses to all problems, whether or not I answered it correctly? If that's the case, I will probably only get through 30 questions in two hours, rather than 40. Also, I plan to spend 1 hour out of every three (during weekdays study sessions, at least) reviewing the flash cards, section material (study notes, etc.), and writing my new lessons learned. Do you think that's excessive?

If I assume 40 questions, I will end up going through roughly 940 questions, not counting the tests.