I am stuck. I have been preparing the GMAT for 6 months now. However, the results have not been satisfying. I am here to share my experience and to seek suggestions.
• Personal background: 26 years, non-native, management consultant
• Objective: 700+
• Study sessions:
- I have few or no hours available during the week. However, I have dedicated the majority of the weekends to GMAT preparation (thus we are talking about at least 15 days of study, or 120 hours).
- Moreover, during exam sessions (August and Christmas' holidays) I studied full-time for at least 2 weeks (adding an additional 25-30 days, at least 200 hours)
- Overall, I prepared far more than the average test taker does, however, I know that this way of studying is not ideal since sessions are spread away (also happened that a couple of times I couldn't study even during the week end, so I didn't touch a book for two weeks or more).
- Unfortunately, I won't be able to modify my schedule
• Material used:
- Manhattan: went through all the books + question banks
- Competitor: went through all the series, including for high scorer
- OG: all the 2015 series
• Tests:
- August 13, 2015: MGMAT, 640 (Q43, V34). I was quite satisfied since I started preparing 3 weeks before and this was the first test ever, so I thought that I could easily score 700+ with more preparation
- August, 19, 2015: GmatPrep, 690 (Q45, V40). After just 6 days (spent entirely at reviewing the concepts which were at the basis of my mistakes) I improved the score significantly. Good.
- August, 21, 2015: GMAT real, 610 (Q41, V34). A disastrous result. I couldn't accept plummeting from the 690 of just 2 days before. I had timing issues and left several question unanswered (3-5). It was such a nightmare, holidays would have soon been over and I would be back to normal work life, which implies no/few study.
- December, 24, 2015: MGMAT, 620 (Q42, V33). Back to holidays; time to see where I stand after the Sept.-Dec. weekend study. Shame! The score felt to the same level of August. But I didn't give up and I started an extremely intense two-weeks studying in order to try the exam immediately after winter holidays.
- January, 01, 2016: GmatPrep, 720 (Q47, V42). I thought: done. Finally I broke through the 700 wall; my goal. Truth to be told, it was the same test I took in August, but honestly I could not remember the questions. Even if this was not the case and I unconsciously remembered few of the questions of 6 months before, I think it was quite a step up. I kept studying to reinforce the progress.
- January, 06, 2016: Competitor, 730 (Q50, V44). Wow. Here we go. Then I should be on truck, two in a row, it cannot be a coincidence.
- January, 08, 2016: MGMAT, 640 (Q44, V34). Bombed. How come? I was doing great on more than half of the test, I was able to solve most of the questions. I got 8 right in a row on Quant and 10 right in a row for Verbal, out of which 5 were 700-800 questions. I even reached 99%ile while I was at question 20. Then how was it possible? The reason was that I entered a vicious circle: after getting right a question, the next one was harder, so took me more than 2 min. to finish it, but I got it right. The next question thus was even harder, and it took me even more than the previous question and so on. Long story short, I left unanswered 3 questions and I was forced to guess on the last 4 questions (all wrong, by luck). So in total 4 questions wrong in a row plus 3 unanswered. This drastically impacted on my result. Just to give you an idea, in verbal I was 85%ile at the end of question 34 (the last I had time to read properly) but finished at 71%ile. This test proved that what I thought to be a commonplace is indeed the most valuable inside for the gmat: the main task is not to answer ALL correct questions, but rather to choose to which answer.
- January, 09, 2016: GmatPrep, 710 (Q48, V39). Newer back down. Lesson learned from MGMAT, I tried to skip the question for which I was sure to need more than 2 mins and I made it. Two days later I was going to take the exam, so I reviewed all mistakes and also the theory were I was not so strong.
- January, 11, 2016: GMAT real, 660 (Q45, V36). For f*ck sake! What's wrong with me? I had not skipped many question, and timing was ok (I left one verbal and no one in quant, just rushed on the last 2).
• Takeaway: At the moment I am lost, I honestly do not know what to do to improve structurally; I am fed-up especially when I think that now I am back to work and I won't have much time until next summer. Dragging the GMAT along with you for months is such a strenuous experience. I had sacrificed my last 6 months, spending little time with my gf, family or friends. And yet did not succeed.
It has always been like being on a swing, scores were going up and then down, up and down again. After 6 months I got a score which is near to what I had 6 months ago almost without studying (just +20).
What should I do now?
I have almost completed all available resources and I know well all the theory, so going back to books won't be useful. Then practice? But where? I have done probably more than 2.000 question (Q+V) and I don't know where to find additional material, though I have few CAT left.
I know I still have a bit of a timing issue but how to improve with it? Also, as you might have noticed, the go live-factor is quite heavy for me. In both tests I significantly underperformed simulations.
Any suggestion / help would be much appreciated.
Thank you all,
Stefano