Hi All,
I scored a 640 on the GMAT exactly a year back. Due to personal reasons, I took a break and did not study for the test the past 1 year. I am looking to Haas Part time. I would like to score a 720+.
How many months is a reasonable time to study and pull my score from a 640 to a 720+. Is a 3-4 month time frame a reasonable time frame.
I scored a 85% on Verbal and only a 55 or 60% on Quant. So I know that I am weaker in quant.
Regards,
Sweta
640 a year back to 720+ today - how long to prep?
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Hi sweta_gmat,
A 3-4 month time frame should be plenty of time for you to study and achieve your goals. A 640 establishes a solid baseline for comparison, but since it's been a year, you're going to have to be re-introduced to all of the material. Depending on how quickly you can get back into the flow of studying, you might need less time than you've planned for.
What materials did you use the last time you studied? How did your Official GMAT score compare to your practice CATs?
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
A 3-4 month time frame should be plenty of time for you to study and achieve your goals. A 640 establishes a solid baseline for comparison, but since it's been a year, you're going to have to be re-introduced to all of the material. Depending on how quickly you can get back into the flow of studying, you might need less time than you've planned for.
What materials did you use the last time you studied? How did your Official GMAT score compare to your practice CATs?
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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Hi Sweta!
Before we can answer this question, I'd suggest taking the GMATPrep 1. We can't assume you're at a 640 today, as you've likely forgotten some concepts over the past year and your strategies will be super rusty. In fact, you might not even break 600! That sounds scary, I know, but we know 640 is "do-able" so it shouldn't take you too much time to get back to (and exceed) that level.
I'd suggest taking the GMATPrep 1 since it'll give you a reliable indicator of where your official score is at at this exact moment. Even if you took it 12 months ago, you likely will have forgotten all of the questions. SO do that, then email me at [email protected] and let me know how you did. How was your pacing/your ability to recall the concepts/your strategy implementation, etc. Did you finish, how long for each question, what types of problems bogged you down, etc. With more information, I could give you a much clearer assessment.
But just to generally answer your question: yes, 3-4 months is generally a reasonable amount of time for GMAT study, but you're also looking to jump 80+ points at MINIMUM (even if we're assuming you're at a 640 today). This is a serious increase, and will require a serious plan of attack. I don't think you can afford to waste time. So take the GMATPrep 1 and let me know how it goes! If you can schedule your GMAT 4 months out and commit to a minimum 20 hours a week of study (and 1 CAT a week on average), 720+ can def happen.
Before we can answer this question, I'd suggest taking the GMATPrep 1. We can't assume you're at a 640 today, as you've likely forgotten some concepts over the past year and your strategies will be super rusty. In fact, you might not even break 600! That sounds scary, I know, but we know 640 is "do-able" so it shouldn't take you too much time to get back to (and exceed) that level.
I'd suggest taking the GMATPrep 1 since it'll give you a reliable indicator of where your official score is at at this exact moment. Even if you took it 12 months ago, you likely will have forgotten all of the questions. SO do that, then email me at [email protected] and let me know how you did. How was your pacing/your ability to recall the concepts/your strategy implementation, etc. Did you finish, how long for each question, what types of problems bogged you down, etc. With more information, I could give you a much clearer assessment.
But just to generally answer your question: yes, 3-4 months is generally a reasonable amount of time for GMAT study, but you're also looking to jump 80+ points at MINIMUM (even if we're assuming you're at a 640 today). This is a serious increase, and will require a serious plan of attack. I don't think you can afford to waste time. So take the GMATPrep 1 and let me know how it goes! If you can schedule your GMAT 4 months out and commit to a minimum 20 hours a week of study (and 1 CAT a week on average), 720+ can def happen.
Vivian Kerr
GMAT Rockstar, Tutor
https://www.GMATrockstar.com
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Former Kaplan and Grockit instructor, freelance GMAT content creator, now offering affordable, effective, Skype-tutoring for the GMAT at $150/hr. Contact: [email protected]
Thank you for all the "thanks" and "follows"!
GMAT Rockstar, Tutor
https://www.GMATrockstar.com
https://www.yelp.com/biz/gmat-rockstar-los-angeles
Former Kaplan and Grockit instructor, freelance GMAT content creator, now offering affordable, effective, Skype-tutoring for the GMAT at $150/hr. Contact: [email protected]
Thank you for all the "thanks" and "follows"!