lol - yeah, if you were standing next to me talking at normal speed, I could pretty much transcribe what you were saying in real time. I've actually had people ask if I'm just randomly banging on the keyboard and not really typing. :)
This:
Got 2 700-800 Qs. wrong back to back & percentile went from 98 to 71.
is not a problem.
This:
Had spent 3.5 mins on each thinking all the while that "I was justtttt there !!
is a problem.
I don't care that you got them wrong - and neither should you. You were gonna get them wrong anyway, and you can get them wrong and still score 700+.
I do care, though, that you wasted time, because that cost you other questions that you COULD have gotten right if you hadn't wasted time on the too-hard questions.
Read this:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... -to-do-it/Sound familiar? Do what it says.
Basically, if you can do a question within the normal timeframe (roughly 2 minutes, sometimes up to 2.5m), then do so. But if you're sitting there thinking "But I'm sure I can figure this out..." then you don't really know what you're doing and you should cut yourself off right now.
Don't think of it as "every 8 questions, I skip" or "I have to skip X questions early on." Make the decision based on what you see on the screen. But you DO have to learn to recognize when you're just being stubborn and spinning your wheels - and you have to let those go.
The test-writers don't really care if you know how to find the area of a circle - and neither do the b-school admissions committees. They do care, very much, whether you're able to set priorities and make hard decisions about how to use limited resources (time) - in short, they care whether you're exhibiting 'good business person' behaviors. A good business person doesn't spend 3 hours trying to do something that has a likely return of $1 while ignoring a task that could take 3 minutes and return $1,000, right?
That's what they're really testing you for - so show them that you aren't going to get distracted when they toss something that's too hard at you. You can still keep your eye on the big picture and you know when to say "That? That's not going to get done today. It's not worth my time."
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... to-win-it/How to know what to move on? Read this:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... nt-part-1/(and start doing what it says!)