Hello!
I hope Stacey will take my question :)
I took the GMAT almost a couple of months ago and scored 720 (Q51, V35). This post should have come immediately thereafter but then I went into some kind of 'screw GMAT' mode :)
I took my first GMATPrep after practicing about 20-25 questions from each section in the OG, and scored 710 with 37 pts in Verbal.
I did a SWOT analysis and figured out that I was relatively strong in SC. I used Manhattan's SC guide to familiarize myself with Grammar rules. As I practiced more and more, I became more aware of the errors in the options and I could pick the right answer 9 times out of 10, spending about 40 seconds on an average per question.
Among the three verbal question types, RC was my second most strong point. I relied on the method of elimination to arrive at my answers and despite my slow reading, I was able to read a passage and answer 4 questions based on it in about 7 minutes. My accuracy was decent at 75-80%.
However, CR was a problem. In each of the 6 MGMATs I took, I struggled to get more than 8 right on 12 or 13. I easily spent ~ 3 minutes on most CR questions because I typically took a long time to simply read an argument and make sense out of it. I did not have a strategy through which I could get the right answer accurately. I tried to improve my reading speed but then lost focus on the crux of the argument. I only relied on eliminating options that didn't make sense to me, but they were sometimes the right answers! I accepted it as it is because I was scoring consistently above 38 in Verbal.
My Verbal scores in the last 3 MGMAT CATs were - 39, 45, 40 - all tests taken less than 5 weeks before the actual test.
I took GMAT Prep 2 three weeks before the test and scored 41 in Verbal.
On the day of the test, I felt I was doing very well. I was extremely confident about my SCs. I got stuck in 2-3 questions in CR but I decided to guess intelligently and move on. RC passages were heavy and there were 2 ambiguous questions. However, I was aware of what they were trying to test and I was confident of the answers that I marked. Ended the test with 1.5 minutes to spare. I was brimming with hope of getting a 49/40+ or 50/40+ split. I was shocked to see a 35 being reported as my Verbal score.
My question is - What am I missing? Is it possible that getting some wrong answers in CR alone or CR and RC alone could have pulled my score down greatly? Eg: getting 4 wrong in CR alone is worse than getting 2 wrong in CR, 1 wrong in RC and SC each?
I don't think more practice is going to help unless I am aware of where I am going wrong. How do I get better at Critical reasoning from where I am?
Thanks a lot!!
Regards,
Subramanian