Hello Stacey, Ron, and friends,
I have read lot of your posts and highly appreciate your concern for students taking GMAT. I have taken GMAT twice.
GMAT 1: Q(50), V (25) --> 620 in Dec 2010
After that test, I joined 9 session course of Manhattan in Phoenix, AZ.
GMAT 2: Q(49), V(25) --> 620 in Dec 2011
Both the time I felt that I did great on GMAT. My College GPA is 3.75 out of 4.0. I have very good profile other than GMAT. I was expecting a solid score. I am completely disappointed.
In one year, I was confident that I have improved verbal a lot. I was having more than 90% accuracy on most of verbal SC questions (fresh ones).
On second GMAT, I think that I sailed smoothly on verbal. I did pretty well on it. I have no clue what went wrong.
I have taken MGMAT in official conditions:
MGMAT 1 : 690 Q(51), V(35)
MGMAT 2 : 710 Q(51), V(36)
MGMAT 3 : 730 Q(51), V(39)
GMATPrep 1: 700 Q(50), V(35)
GMATPrep 2: 740 Q(51), V(40)
On the test day, I was very relaxed and refreshed. Even at the last question, my energy level was strong. I was very prudent during verbal. I hardly faced any anxiety level at all.
Still, I have no idea why? Why it happened to me? I thought about timing issue. I might have some timing issue, but that wasn't a problem because I finished the section within required time.
I didn't guess. I would do the same if I were in the home. Now, do you think that algorithm consider how much time I took to answer a question? I don't think so.
Yes, I am non-native speaker of English. So, is it a game plan of GMAT to get rid of the people like me by putting some nuances in exam and highly penalizing the student for missing them?
I have started seeing these cases too often with people who are very capable, and who are from my native country.
Please enlighten me. I have gone through all the links, which you gave on forums to see what went wrong. I couldn't think of anything which can hurt my score to such an extent.
The only thing I can wonder is very stringent scoring on verbal.
-Thanks,