by StaceyKoprince Thu May 22, 2008 2:29 pm
Is there a reason why you need a better quant score than 79th percentile? Even the top 5 schools think that's good enough. (That doesn't mean they'll let you in, of course - it just means that, if they reject you, your GMAT score won't be why...)
Did you have bad grades in math classes in college or some other reason why you need to get an extra good quant score because you need to compensate for something?
With respect to timing, it's best to maintain a steady pace throughout the entire test. You cannot let yourself get so sucked in at any point that you lose time and then have to guess at the end - that's what's bringing you down.
Think of it this way: you are going to get lots of questions wrong. Those few questions on which you get sucked into spending 3 or 4 (or more!) minutes? You're going to get them wrong anyway, most likely. The fact that you can't do them in 2 minutes means you don't REALLY know how to do that question, not in the way it's supposed to be done. So if you're going to get it wrong anyway, get it wrong faster - in 2 minutes. That way, you don't ALSO lose more points at the end of the section.
Go into the test with the mindset that you are going to hit 5 questions that just drive you crazy. DO NOT go over 2 minutes when you hit those questions. Instead, take the time you have to make an educated guess (which is just a fancy way of saying: find some wrong answers and cross them off) and then move on either at or before the 2-min mark. And tell yourself, "That was one of my 5!" so that you don't psych yourself out.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep