Hi everybody, I'm posting because I just decided to give the GMAT one last try (hopefully!!!). I think it is obvious that I need to change my strategy because I just can´t cross the 600 barrier. Let me tell you a little about what I've been doing.
For my 3rd attempt I started my preparation in January studying between 3 to 4 hours during the week and between 6 to 8 hours during weekends. I did every math, sentence correction and most of the critical reasoning problems in OG12. I went through these problems trying to solve them in less than 2 minutes and checking the explanation for every problem, right or wrong.
After I was done with the OG, I started doing sets of problems I got from a friend who took a local prep course. I consider that the difficulty level of these problems was comparable to those in the actual GMAT and I had enough of them to keep myself busy for several weeks. The downside to these sets is that they didn´t come with an explanation like the one given in the OG, I just had the answers and the steps my friend took to get to those answers. I found these sets really useful because there were a lot of really hard problems but given I didn´t have a clear explanation I wasn´t sure I fully understood them.
One month before the exam I started doing MGMAT CATs, my scores where 650 (Q43 V36) 660 (Q43 V37) 700 (Q47 V38). During my 1st and 2nd attempt on the GMAT I did the first 6 available exams but given that a lot of time had passed since I took them I thought these 3 scores where a good of approximation of where I stood. After revising the exams I ran the assessment provided by Manhattan Gmat to get a view of my performance on each area. I did every problem again, under timed conditions, in the areas in which I scored the lowest and went through every explanation again. I felt that this was really useful because I finally understood some problems I wasn't able to get right when doing the CATs.
Then, after I finished reviewing the Manhattan GMAT exams, I took the GMAT Prep exams. Like with the MGMAT exams, a lot of time had passed since I did a GMAT Prep, so I considered that I wasn´t going to remember the answers and that it was going to be good study material. I took the first exam 1 week before from the real one and I got 710 (Q46 V42). I didn't want to do the second one because I didn't want to affect the confidence that score gave me. During the last few days I just reviewed some math concepts, went through my notes and did some sentence correction and critical reasoning problems.
On test day I felt calmed and confident that I was going to achieve my desired score (650+). I went through AWA pretty smoothly and went out for my first break still really calmed but before starting math I began to feel really nervous. I started with the math section still feeling nervous; I got a really easy problem to start and that helped me to calm down again. I continued doing the math section feeling that I was getting most of the problems correct, I even got some problems I thought were really difficult (maybe 700-800 level) and I felt that I was doing really good. I finished the math section with 1 or 2 minutes to spare. I went out for the second break feeling really optimistic.
I started the verbal section with a lot of confidence and really sure I was going to achieve my objective. I got some hard sentence correction exercises and some really confusing critical reason problems, but overall I felt I was doing Ok. I never had any problems with RC and the passages I got were really clear to me and the answers weer easy to find. I finished verbal section with 15 minutes to spare! After reviewing the last 10 questions without any rush because of the time I had left, I finished the exam. The result was AWFUL, DISAPOINTING and really CONFUSING! I got a 550 ! (V38 Q28).
I think that I need to take a break from everything related to the GMAT so I'm planning to start studying again on mid-June and I´d like take the test on mid-August. That gives me 8 weeks to study.
I'm posting this 1 week after that horrible score to ask the experts on this forum the following: What else can I do this time to get a better score?!?!?! Which materials should I check? Should I go back to fundamentals or should I keep practicing?
I think I'll have 4 hours available to study during the week and 8-10 hours on weekends
I don't plan to let the GMAT beat me again... but I need a new strategy if I want to turn things around.
Thanks a lot for your advice
René