Hi Stacey,
I gave my GMAT exam this week and scored an abysmal 560 (Q40, V27). My target is 700+. I will certainly be retaking the exam sometime at the end of June or early July.
Let me elaborate on the prep strategy that I have used over the last six months. Although I have been preparing for the GMAT for almost a year, I really became serious in December 2012.
First, I started my preparation using the Manhattan strategy guides, and in five months I went through the first iteration of these guides. Additionally, I also used Manhattan GMAT OG Archer to monitor my performance on the OG problems. Furthermore, as I am a non-native English speaker, I signed up for E-GMAT verbal live course.
Second, as a part of my preparation, I not only solved around 750 quant and 350 verbal problems from the OGs, but also spent a significant amount of time in reviewing these problems. My reviews were based on your article "How to review a practice problem".
Eighty percent of these problems were solved under timed conditions. As per OG Archer stats, for quant, I had 90% correct problems with an average time of 1:42. Overall, I found myself in a comfortable zone with quant; with the exception of the last 10% problems that I decided to skip if I see them on GMAT. I am not math prodigy, but as an engineer I thought that I can hold my own. (BAD IDEA!).
For verbal, I had 79% correct problems with an average time of 1:35. However, I believe that I did not practice verbal as much as I did quant. Solving 350 problems out of the 830 or so that are given in OG guides are not enough. In verbal my strength is SC and weakness is RC.
Third, I also purchased the set Manhattan CATs. All the tests were taken under actual test taking conditions. The scores on the Manhattan GMAT and GMAT Prep CATs are as follows:
Manhattan GMAT CAT 1 - 570 (Q41, V28) - 02/28/13
GMAT Prep CAT 1 - 550 (Q36, V29) - 03/13/13
Manhattan GMAT CAT 2 - 540 (Q38, V27) - 04/2/13
Manhattan GMAT CAT 3 - 610 (Q38, V35) - 04/12/12
Manhattan GMAT CAT 4 - 570 (Q41, V28) - 04/19/13
Manhattan GMAT CAT 5 - 590 (Q44, V27) - 04/27/13
Manhattan GMAT CAT 6 - 590 (Q39, V32) - 05/09/13
GMAT Prep CAT 2 - 610 (Q46, V28) - 05/18/13
GMAT Prep CAT 3 -710 (Q47, V40) - 05/19/13
With the exception of one outlier data point of 710, all other scores were in a standard deviation of 25.8. Both the mean (578.75) and the median (570) are quite close to each other. I have disregarded the 710 data point in my calculations. Therefore, based on the above mock test score, I knew that I will be scoring somewhere near the mean of 578.
I reviewed all these exams very thoroughly. Additionally, before looking at the solutions for incorrect problems, I tried them again. Surprisingly, I found that I could solve 80% of the incorrect problems correctly on the second try. I knew how to classify the problem and what strategy to use.
Finally, two weeks before the exam I changed my focus of study as per your two part article: The Last 14 days. I am an ardent follower of the Manhattan GMAT blog and especially your articles (You are the all mighty GMAT Oracle). I developed my game plan and reviewed exactly as directed in your article.
On the real exam day, I arrived at the center on time, checked in and started the test. I did both the essay and the IR part swiftly without wasting a lot of energy. Then took my first break and afterwards started the quant section. As I had made a commitment to myself that I will stick to my game plan and timing strategy, I found the quant section easy. I knew what I was doing on most of the problems, with the exception of a few data sufficiency problems that I had to guess. By the time I was on the 36th question I had 4 minutes left. I finished the quant section and then went for the second break. Then I started the verbal section.
This is where things started going south. After I had done 5 questions I don’t know what happened. I started getting really tough sentence correction questions one after the other. Although I had 83% success rate on the SC questions, I found myself in a real tough position. In any case, as I had to stick to my timing strategy I made educated guesses and moved on. In the middle of the section I also noticed that I made some careless mistakes on at least two questions. Finally, I completed the section and looked at my score of 560.
Now I am planning to retake the exam in approximately 1-1.5 months.
Here comes the dilemma. The results of both the mock test and the real GMAT test do not measure up to my real conceptual understanding of the material, and with the OG Archer stats. I am confused because I know the concepts very well and have reviewed them again and again in the last one month.
However, I believe that I may have poor test taking skills. But I don’t know how to identify and rectify these poor skills. I know that I need more practice. May be I should do drills with large sets of both quant and verbal questions. Moreover, I am not sure if retaking the test in 1-1.5 months is a good timeframe.
At this point, I am feeling a bit lost on what type of retake strategy to employ. I will appreciate if you can push me in the right direction.
Thanks,