Biso wrote:Hi, my case is very similar to Tina's. I took the gmat yesterday and got a 570 (Q49 V19). I was scoring in the 30-32 range on the verbal section. My first ever prep test i got a V25, which was the lowest verbal score i got in all my prep tests. I kept improving till i got V32. I was hoping to improve even more so i can end up with a Q49 V35/36 so i can break the 700 mark. However, things did not go as planned. I thought i was doing well on the verbal part. Questions were getting harder, much harder than what i got in any of my prep tests. I assumed this means i am doing very well, only to find out later that i ended up with a disastrous V19 that pulled my score down more than 80 points had i gotten my average V score.
Here are the sources I studied verbal from:
1. Official guide 16 ( Verbal and Main books) Two rounds
2. Manhattan SC (this book helped me improve on the SC)
3. Magoosh online videos and questions (this source was helpful in SC more than CR and RC to me)
I need to improve RC and CR big time to be able to score higher than V35.
I would really appreciate your advise going forward. Which sources should i study from now? how to improve my RC and CR?
Thanks in advance
First, if it's any consolation, it seems as though that V19 is an outlier. Odds are, you could take the test again in a few weeks and see a score that's more in line with your practice exams.
Still, no reason not to try to improve in the meantime.
Some pieces of advice:
- When you review questions from old exams try to make horizontal connections between the sections. For example, you are probably well aware of the importance of modifiers in Sentence Correction, but you'll come to see, when analyzing answer choices, that modifiers are also incredibly important in CR and RC - "some" vs "most" vs "all" vs "few" are incredibly important distinctions. Verbal, in general, is about logic and attention to linguistic detail.)
- Read voraciously for a few weeks. It can be anything - novels, journals, etc. - so long as it's challenging. Our brains change rapidly when we read more:
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/ar ... in/282952/
- Consider incorporating a mindfulness meditation practice. There's interesting research about how meditation can boost standardized test scores in a very short period of time:
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archi ... on/275564/