Hey People,
I just gave my GMATPrep today after about 40 days of preparation. The score is as follows:
GMATPrep: 720 (Q49; V40)
The sad part is that I had 9 errors on verbal of which 6 were SC (1CR and 2 RC). Even on other practise tests, I consistently get just 1 CR wrong and 1-2 RC. Whereas my SC error rate is 4-6. I know that if I can manage to get a grip on my SC I can greatly improve my skill.
I am presently working with MGMAT SC and the OG. Is their anything else that I can do to improve SC as that is the only clear area of weakness that I see.
Thanks for your advice!!
Cheers!!
Sentence Correction killing my score!!
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- akhilsuhag
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- Brian@VeritasPrep
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Hey Akhil,
Congratulations on a fantastic practice test score! That's great news and it sounds like it's certainly well-deserved.
For SC improvement, I think a big step would be to go back to the errors you made (on this test and some recent homework sets or other practice tests) and determine why you made them. A few things you may learn are:
-A particular error type is really challenging for you (for example, verb tenses)
-You missed a bunch of idioms*
-You tend to miss longer (or shorter) sentences, or those with all (or only part) underlined
-You were generally down to two, but then missed that last decision point
And whatever you learn, you now know something to work on. If it's a particular error type or type of sentence (long/short/all-underlined), you can seek out more questions of that type and work more specifically on it.
*And if it's idiom-related questions you're missing, go back and find a better reason. The GMAT isn't a test of assorted idioms - it's a test of logic and big-picture rules. One thing I've found with a lot of students is that they disproportionately miss a lot of questions when their reason for eliminating answers is "it's not idiomatic". There's almost always a better, more scalable reason than "it's wrong because that's just not the way you say it", and if you force yourself to see that deeper, more scalable reason you can make a huge improvement in accuracy and comfort with these.
Congratulations on a fantastic practice test score! That's great news and it sounds like it's certainly well-deserved.
For SC improvement, I think a big step would be to go back to the errors you made (on this test and some recent homework sets or other practice tests) and determine why you made them. A few things you may learn are:
-A particular error type is really challenging for you (for example, verb tenses)
-You missed a bunch of idioms*
-You tend to miss longer (or shorter) sentences, or those with all (or only part) underlined
-You were generally down to two, but then missed that last decision point
And whatever you learn, you now know something to work on. If it's a particular error type or type of sentence (long/short/all-underlined), you can seek out more questions of that type and work more specifically on it.
*And if it's idiom-related questions you're missing, go back and find a better reason. The GMAT isn't a test of assorted idioms - it's a test of logic and big-picture rules. One thing I've found with a lot of students is that they disproportionately miss a lot of questions when their reason for eliminating answers is "it's not idiomatic". There's almost always a better, more scalable reason than "it's wrong because that's just not the way you say it", and if you force yourself to see that deeper, more scalable reason you can make a huge improvement in accuracy and comfort with these.
Brian Galvin
GMAT Instructor
Chief Academic Officer
Veritas Prep
Looking for GMAT practice questions? Try out the Veritas Prep Question Bank. Learn More.
GMAT Instructor
Chief Academic Officer
Veritas Prep
Looking for GMAT practice questions? Try out the Veritas Prep Question Bank. Learn More.