Hi MGMAT experts,
I despertely need your advice. My problem has been discussed several times in various threads but I believe I already took majority of those advices.
On March 21, 2014, I gave my first GMAT, and scored 610. Q49, V23.
I was shocked and very dissapointed with my Vebal score, given the amount of effort I had put in for this section.
Here is a summary of my progress.
In May 2013, I signed up for GMAT prep course offered by one of your competitors. Although, I started my preparation in May, I was'nt giving enough time to my preparation until August 2013. I was'nt religious in my study schedule and did not appreciate the amount of effort required to prepare for this exam. Starting August 2013, I seriously started studying for this exam. I gave practice CATs of that course, and scored relatively good in Quant section however bad in Verbal section. In December 2013, I attempted my first GMAT-Prep exam.
December 7, 2013. GMAT Prep 1: 550 (Q43, V23)
At this time, I figured my Verbal foundations were not solid. For CR question types. the correspondence course helped me improve my analysis skills, however I was still averaging 3-3.5 minutes per question. I was just lost in RC section for which I knew all the basics (reading skills required, identifying passage types, identifying question types, identifying wrong answers etc.), however I was not able to convert that testing knowledge in practice. Sentence correction was plain dead. I committed too many mistakes, and my basics were'nt solid. Moreover, I was running short of 15 minutes on top of 75 minutes for this section. I guessed heavily in last 10 questions on top of whatever I was doing wrong.
That's when I realized I needed to do something drastic as my tactics were'nt working. I immidiately ordered MGMAT's IR, CR, RC, SC, and Advanced Quant books. By mid-January, I finished reading all of them. I connected with these books much more than the previous correspondence course. Based on the recommendations of these books, I ordered OG 13th edition, Verbal and Quant 2nd editions to practice real GMAT problems. I started using "official guide stopwatch" on MGMAT's student's center to time all my questions. In verbal section of OGs, I started making question sets of roughly 40 mixed questions and timed them accordingly. The question sets had mixed questions of SC, RC and CR section in increasing order of difficulty. eg. Question set 1 will have first 12 questions of SC, first 12 of RC, and first 12 of CR, so on and so forth. I finished both official guides this way. I also did online question banks, free resources comprised of 25 questions that come with MGMAT books.
I googled almost all SC questions on MGMAT forum and learned a lot from Ron, Stacey, Tim and others for majority of those question threads. In short, I reflected on my work. I read why wrong answers are wrong, and why right answers are right.
December 7, 2013: GMAT prep 1: 550 (Q43, V23) (Comments: Verbal section: Ran out of time by 15 minutes)
Jan 11, 2014: MGMAT CAT 1: 580 (Q37, V32) (Comments: I paused the exam couple of times in verbal section)
Jan 25, 2014: MGMAT CAT 2: 630 (Q44, V32) (Comments: I paused the exam couple of times in verbal section)
Feb 10, 2014: MGMAT CAT 3: 650 (Q44, V35) (Comments: I paused the exam couple of times in verbal section)
Feb 19, 2014: GMAT Prep 2: 620 (Q49, V26)
Mar. 2, 2014: MGMAT CAT 4: 610 (Q46, V29) (Comments: Exam conditions)
Mar. 8, 2014: MGMAT CAT 5: 640 (Q48, V31) (Comments: Exam conditions)
Mar 15, 2014: MGMAT CAT 6: 690 (Q46, V38) (Comments: Exam conditions)
March 21: REAL GMAT: 610 (Q49, V23)
MGMAT CAT Analysis:Thanks to Stacey's articles I have learned my strengths and weaknesses in both Quant and Verbal sections using MGMAT's "Generate Assessment reports" tool.
For RC: I followed Stacey's articles in forums.
Short passage: I average 3.5-4.5 minutes to answer first question, i.e. reading the passage and answering te first question.
Long passage: I average 5-5.5 minutes. Difficult and long passages take me up to 6 minutes to answer first question
For CR: I followed POSE method discussed in 3-part article. I average 2.5 - 3 minutes per CR question. Be it wrong or right. It takes me 90 seconds just to understand the argument. This is despite using the P.o.s.e method. And then, when I start to read the answer choices and apply the Wrong-right elimination method, I easily cross the 2 minutes mark. Inference questions take me even longer, however, I do not let those questions take me more than 3 minutes at which point I make an educated guess.
SC: I average 90 seconds. Short ones take me around 60-75, long ones with a lot of modifiers take me upto 2.5 minutes.
English is not my first language. That said, my communication skills are good. I did my undergrad. deg. in engineering from a north american university and can fully express my ideas in written and spoken english.
BUT, my comprehension is slow. I read CR argument two times to understand it completely. I read first paragraph of difficult Long passage almost 2 times to understand the skeleton of the passage.
GMAT exam: Verbal section: I ran out of time by approximately 6 minutes. I finished the section by answering all questions but randomly guessed on last 3 questions (2 SC and 1 CR: I did not even get time to read them). And the three before them were RC short passage questions. I read the passage for the sake of reading, read and answered the questions for the sake of answering by using judgement. I found that I had no time to refer back to the passage to grab the specific detail, or function of a text so answered the questions based on how they sound and the practice I did to eliminate wrong answers. This is on top of whatever I did right/wrong in the rest of the Verbal section.
Thanks for taking the time to read and understand my situation. At this point I am lost again. I have exhausted all my resources. I can retake MGMAT CATs, but I will find a lot of repeated questions and the scores will be inflated. They will be good for trying new questions under timing constraints but still, they won't reflect reality. I can order 2 more GMAT-prep practice CATs and verbal question sets to practice but I am wondering whether it will be any good. I do not know what else I can do to improve my verbal score. One thing is for certain, I have improved the timing of Verbal section from my first GMAT Prep exam back in December. Although, it may be insufficient, but I have come a long way. Also, thanks to the SC guide, I have much better handle on SC section today than ever before.
I have spent a lot of time and money to prepare for this exam. Overall, my experience with Manhattan GMAT has been nothing short of excellent, therefore I come to you to seek your advice.