prafullporwal Wrote:I am not sure whether for general public but for me certainly it falls under horrible experience and I think that might have (not sure) messed up my score. During the verbal section, the neighbouring office started carpentry work and there were noise of hammer use which disturbed my whole concentration. I contacted the help staff and they provided me ear plugs which did not help and ultimately ended with a V26 score :-(.
I wasted initial 30-40 minsuts of my verbal section in adjusting to this.
there is often noise at test centers. in some big city test centers (such as the one in nyc), especially if they're relatively close to street level, there is ALWAYS random noise - it's just part of the environment. if you're noise sensitive, you may want to actually call test centers and ask the staff about the noise level.
in any case, you should probably PRACTICE WITH NOISE, since it's a good idea to replicate your test environment. even if there is absolute monastery-style silence in the test environment, there will still be several other students around you typing away on those obnoxiously loud keyboards, so you'll still be dealing with ambient noise.
therefore, you should find some type of semi noisy environment (even if that just means tuning a radio to static) in which to practice.
if you DEPEND on absolute quiet in order to study, all you're doing is handicapping yourself. not a good idea. (it's never a good idea to practice in ideal conditions. for anything. ever.)
Just wanted to know if is there any way this can be reported and are there any chances of me getting some chance of re-attempt or this score cancellation?
you can't cancel your scores. the only chance you had to do that was directly after the exam.
you can indeed report the noise. although if your test center is in a city, there's probably not much that can be done about it (that kind of noise is only allowed during business hours).
if this is a huge problem, then you may want to try scheduling your test for a saturday or sunday.
What would be the logical timeframe when I should appear, because Quantitative-48 seems to be okay and even if you consider that i got this score without any distraction and may need to work extensively on verbal section.
this will depend on where your weaknesses lie.
if your principal weakness in verbal is SENTENCE CORRECTION, then you're going to need MORE time for preparation - but, ultimately, you should be able to gain
more points than you could on other areas.
reason: SC basically consists of learning rule after rule after rule after rule, pretty much one at a time.
if your principal weakness in verbal is CR or RC, then you should be able to gain points more quickly, but you probably won't be able to gain as many points as you would in SC.
reason: most trouble with CR or RC is based on misunderstanding the fundamental nature of the problems. (for instance, most people don't understand that "inferences" mean things that 100% HAVE TO be true, and so pick inferences that are based on extra assumptions.)
you can correct these mistaken assumptions pretty quickly - leading to a large initial gain - but, after that, gaining any
further points tends to be really hard.