Hi all, first time posting here.
I took an online class from late April to early July from Josh Braslow. Having studied LSAT a few years ago and graduated from an Ivy engineering program, I really didn't feel that taking a course was necessary but decided to do so just to put some discipline on myself - at least for me, it would've been a lot more difficult to voluntarily spare time to study after work if I didn't take a course.
Here's my progress.
CAT 1: I procrastinated and took CAT 1 on 6/23 untimed and got 730 (Q49 and V40). I've been in finance post college and forgot A LOT of algebra stuff.
CAT 2: 6/29. first timed with IR. Got 5.13 on IR and 680 (Q45 and V37). Really shocked and started actually doing 10-20 problems after work on weekdays with going through explanations even on correct choices. IR seemed pretty difficult.
CAT 3: 7/7. Got 4.5 on IR and 720 (Q47 and V42). Going through some LSAT CR sets helped, I guess. LSAT is significantly harder than GMAT verbal, but does contain unnecessary materials, such as parallel, agree/disagree, etc. Still not satisfied with Quant.
GMATPrep 1: 7/27. Got 5 on IR and 670 (Q48 and V34). I was being distracted while doing the verbal section because my friend was over... Anyhow, I was still pretty disappointed with my IR score and didn't know where to improve!
CAT 4: 8/1 - the day before actual GMAT. Got 4.57 on IR and 740 (Q46 and V45). Verbal came out to be 99% percentile, making me very happy. I knew I could improve Quant by just reviewing specific type problems (rate, combination, etc.) and geometry.
The day before, I took a vacation day and did the following:
[*] Looked at some example essays and templates on GMAT Club. Up to this point, I didn't write a single essay.
[*] Reviewed CAT 4 entirely.
[*] Did 10 or so Quant challenge problems.
[*] Reviewed some Quant sections on OG 13.
I felt "whatever" on my IR scores, so didn't do much on that. My sub-section scores varied quite significantly, but I was targeting ~Q48-49 and V42-43 for ~750.
On my actual exam, I got 8 on IR and 740 (Q51 and V39).
Here are my takeaways:
[*] MGMAT IR seems much harder than the actual exam. Didn't even expect I'd get the highest score. But I did get a problem which I didn't really understand. Just guessed answer choices quickly and moved to another one. You don't need to get all of 12 questions correct to get an 8 - you can easily forgo 2-3 problems if you're comfortable with the remainder.
[*] I don't know why but MGMAT Quant seemed harder also. Or perhaps because I focused on math yesterday. Actual test questions seem quite easy so I was wondering if I was missing many questions.
[*] Because my point above, challenge problems seemed quite worthless. The difficulty was not even close. If you're in sub-48 or so range, don't bother going through challenge problems. Just know your weak areas, understand by reading the OG and do some problems. I did focus on rate and combination problems and sure enough both came up on my actual. Time was a challenge for me on practices, but I actually had ~5 minutes left at the end of my Quant section.
[*] I totally bombed Verbal. Reading was easy and I didn't necessarily feel that SC and CR questions were tricky, but it turned out pretty low. I was darn disappointed because 45 on the last CAT would put me on 770-780 range. I had about 10 minutes left at the end of the Verbal section.
[*] At least for me, my previous practice exams didn't really provide a good indicator for how I'd do on the actual because sub-scores fluctuated so much.
[*] For a bit, I wondered if I'd go for another try to shoot for 760+, but soon decided I'd rather focus on my applications than another 5 weeks on GMAT. 99% and 97% do make me feel the difference, but 740 seems a tricky score to retry.
All of my (ex-)colleagues and friends who did MBA or are starting MBA got 730-750 and went to top 10 programs. I talked to 2 of them today and they just advised me to focus on apps (essays) and not to look back on GMAT.
Happy GMATing!