by marcovg Wed Jun 05, 2013 11:38 pm
Hi Stacey,
I just finished to device my 1st mgmat test:
QUANT:
I solve 23 questions out of 35.
Takeaways: I have Time management issues, especially with PS questions. These kinds of questions are like the ones that I used to solve back in high school or in the university. I didn’t have the GMAT MINDSET that you mentioned in your articles. I just got carried away trying to solve the problem. I think these stats don’t reflect my real quant because I didn’t answer all the questions, BUT it really helped me understand the right way to approach the GMAT quant section. As for the content and topic, I see I have weakness with number properties and quadratic eq. Although it wasn’t tested in the exam, I do have problems with combinatorics and permutation. As for my study plan, this week I will review MGMAT books (refresh some concepts and basics) number properties, FDP and Word problems and then do some drills (with you quality over quantity approach) under timed conditions of course. These three books represent my weaknesses and of course a big chunk of GMAT exam.
By question format:
PS: 43% right out of 14 questions difficulty ranging 600 to 660. My timing is the worst 3:58 RIGHT and 4:15 WRONG questions.
DS: 60% right out of 10 questions difficulty ranging from 550 to 650. My timing was 1:51 Right questions and 1:58 wrong questions.
By difficulty:
PS: I got right 100% 300-500 questions and 500 -600 questions, 22% right 600-700 questions and 50% 700-800 questions.
DS: I got right 100% 300-500 questions and 500 -600 questions, and 43% right 600-700 questions.
By topics:
Linear equations: 50%, Exponent & Roots: 100%, Quadratic equations: 0%, Formulas: 50%.
VERBAL
I answered all the questions, 41 out of 41.
Takeaways: For Verbal, during the exam I knew I was doing great at SC, because I’ve been doing SC drills EVERYDAY at least 5 sc questions. I know that if I want to improve my score, SC has to be my propriety. I will continue with my habit of doing SC questions every day, but I will study those questions like you said in your article. Something odd in my report is that I had 33% correct of 600-700 level questions which represents 1 out of 3 questions. My conclusion here is that both wrong answers were related to grammar English, so I will have to read more of GMAT grammar (I downloaded a gmatclub grammar book that looks very strong in these kind of content). For CR, I think I can do better, I know the basics, find the conclusion, premises etc and apply some techniques such as negate, etc. The problem (TBH, I don’t know whether is a problem or not using them lol) is that I don’t use this techniques because I find them I little waste of time; instead, what I do is pre-think. I find pre-thinking VERY useful. Last but not least, RC... I don’t really like it, but in order to improve my score in RC, I read the economist (it is my homepage, I read at least 1 article a day). This way, I get used to English grammar, vocabulary, and I improve my reading speed and my understanding (I indirectly study for SC in that I see how are the sentences structured, clauses, punctuation, etc.)
So as for Verbal goes, as I said before, I will continue to practice and practice, but with your approach.
By question format:
SC: 67% correct, difficulty ranging from 740 to 710. My timing was 1:59 (right) and 1:58 (wrong)
CR: 57% correct, difficulty ranging from 700 to 730. My timing was 1:19 (right) and 2:12 (wrong)
RC: 42% correct, difficulty ranging from 690 to 710. My timing was 2:04 (right) and 1:33 (wrong)
By difficulty:
SC: 33% correct of 600-700 and 75% correct of 700-800 questions.
CR: 100% correct of 500-600 and 67% correct of 600-700 qs and 50% correct of 700-800 qs
RC: 75% correct of 600-700 qs and 29% correct of 700-800qs
By topics:
SC: BEST at SVA, MOD, Concision, Parallelism and Comparisons, Worst at Quantity and Idioms
CR: BEST at Evaluate the Argument and Worst at Describe the role.
RC: Best at passage structure and WORST at inference (1 out of 4)
Overall, my plan is to Study each question format a day, (with a quant focus pattern) for example: PS, DS, SC, PS, DS, CR, PS, DS, RC and so on. I will start today with PS till June 22nd when I will do my 2nds mock test.
If I follow this plan, I would have studied for 6 days PS, 6 days DS, 2 days for SC (I will try to do at least 5 SC everyday), 1 day of CR (I will try to do a couple of CR questions everyday) and 1 day of RC (plus reading journals)
Per question format I plan to study:
PS: Number properties, Inequalities, FDP and word problems (the same for DS).
For verbal in general, I plan to read the gmatclub grammar book first, then study SC: IDIOMS, and SVA and practice the rest of topics, but a lot of emphasis on IDIOMS.
CR: Practice inference questions and boldface question (I hate this qs, hit or miss most of the time)
RC: Read the economist and other journals and practice GMAT passages.
The books that I will use for this first stage are MGMAT books and OG 13th (although I know every questions answer, I will redo them, from start to finish and I will go further, and try to understand what is behind these questions). I also have Kaplan but I don't find them useful and I don't trust them.
On a side note, I bought the GMAT quant and verbal review, I think I will use them after my 2nd mock test. I don't want to waste them.
Finally, I wanted to say that even though I have 3 months of study I don't find them a waste of time, but a stage where I could get used to the questions the gmat throws at and build some of the basics. The good news is that I realize how to attack the gmat thanks to your articles.
Well, as I said before, I’m very optimistic and I do want to improve my gmat score. I will completely redesign my studies habits as I plan to do my next mock test one week before July. Lets see how it goes.
MV
p.s when you say "it will take 2 months to improve X score or 3 months" what are the things that you consider? Is it because your meticulous technique of study? a common indicator?