Hi everybody,
Before I move on with my question I would like to point out that I already had the GMAT exam once, precisely on the 20th of September; unfortunately my score was definitely not enough (otherwise I would be here posting this wouldn't I?). I got a 580 as a score (55th percentile) with a score breakdown of 38V (84th percentile) and Q_Q 32Q (28th percentile). Yeah yeah i know it sucks right? Anyway I have to say that during the preparation time I had, about 3 weeks, I was working 40h a week and I had almost no time to dedicate to preparation (maybe 20 h in total?). On top of that I should add that I had almost no basic math preparation during my years at high school (I was a bad student myself and I had really incompetent teachers) so no wonder why I performed so bad on the text; the funny part is that I studied only the quant material and not the verbal and that English is not even my first language.
Anyway after I received my final grade I had to quit my internship and move to study full time for the GMAT, which I plan to give on the 7th or 8th of this month (13 days :O !!); don't think I am crazy! I didn't need the internship at all, I was doing that only to strengthen my curriculum.
Now it has been around four weeks of studying:
-during the first 2 weeks I only had the OG13 and the Quant2 to study on so I spent an average of 7 hours a day working on the PS, which I completed twice, and DS problems, most of which I completed once and some twice
-At the beginning of the third week I finally received the Manhattan material (the basic math book, the 5 separate guides and the advanced math book) and I spent always an average of 6-7 hours per day on the books!
The average of 6-7 hours a day applies from Monday to Saturday! On all Sundays I spent the morning doing a trial exams and rested on the evening
So in the past 10 days I managed to finally get the theory of 6 of the 7 books I ordered (excluding the advanced guide) and understand what I couldn't understand just by analyzing the problems from the OG and Quant books; as a matter of fact I needed to study the theory since I was missing several important elements.
Anyway now I finally feel like I got a chance; I have never been really good at math but I like it and I also like to study and I spent a lot of time and effort on this preparation so I am confident it will possibly go ok this time (after all how can I do worse than a 28th percentile :D).
What I don't know is what to do now. Today I am working on all the exercises I got wrong on both the times I did all the PS (90% are Hard or Devilish according to OG Archer); also yesterday I started studying the advanced math book which is really interesting and I am sure it could somehow help me but I feel like I have no time anymore.
So from tomorrow I was planning to do all the math problems I can find on the Manhattan online resources, re-read all the 5 guides (not the basic math book), re-do as many OG problems I can and, as the exam date come closer, start doing one trial test per day. I was also planning to do some of the hardest verbal OG exercises, just to see if I still get them right.
Do you think this is a good strategy? I would say that by now I get around 60-70% of the 650 level math questions right (maybe a little bit more). Also what do you think about the advance math book? Should I study it? I mean it does look hard but it is really interesting and I am sure it could help me performing well even on easy or medium difficulty level questions.
On Sunday I will do another Manhattan test and I will give you the results so you can have a better idea.