Dear Stacey,
Hope you're doing well. I would like to begin by thanking you on behalf of each and every student for being extremely dedicated toward us students, toward Manhattan Prep and toward teaching in general. Before I talk about how my preparation was, I would like to thank Sage Pearce Higgins for responding to all my SC questions in detail and always showing me the bigger picture, and, of course, I would like to thank the inimitable Ron Purewal. He was the Dronacharya to my Eklavya (refer to The Mahabharata: the greatest ever Indian epic). He never replied directly to any of my posts (probably he's busy as I don't see him on the forums anymore), but I learnt a lot from him, especially for the Verbal section. I cannot get over how good he is. As a side question: WHERE IS HE?
Please brace yourself for this is a long post and will require your time.
I took my first official GMAT exam on 16th April, 2018 (Monday) and scored 660 without studying CR at all. I know it's not a bad score, but my goal is 720+.
Split was:
Quant 42 (Extremely poor)
Verbal 39 (Satisfactory)
IR 7.0
I started my preparation started in October, 2017 when I took my GMAT prep test 1. I scored 500 (Q29 and V30). Following is a month-wise break-up of my preparation for you to get an idea of my preparation style and judge whether I made any major errors.
October:
3 Manhattan Quant guides:
Number properties
Fractions, Decimals and Percents and,
Algebra
I also completed all associated OG sets.
Toward the end of October, I thought that I was comfortable in Quant and that I need to start with the Verbal portion.
November:
Manhattan Foundations of Verbal full guide (without the CR portion)
December 1st - December 15th:
Manhattan SC Strategy Guide (without the associated OG questions)
Break of about 60 days from December 15th to February 17th due to health reasons.
Mid February to End February:
Revision of all that I had learnt from October to Mid-December.
March:
All OG questions associated with SC guide (in excruciating detail). I looked up each question on the MGMAT Verbal Forum and read each and every instructor's comments on the questions.
Please note that I did not study CR at all because I preferred quality SC study over starting CR fresh.
Manhattan RC guide.
All OG questions associated with RC guide.
1 hour reading every day from sources such as:
Scientific American
Smithsonian
Harvard Review
The Economist
2 Manhattan Quant guides:
Word Problems
Geometry
Also took a MGMAT CAT on 18th March. I scored 650 on the test (Q41 V38). I was pretty demotivated with the Quant score.
The analysis showed me that I was weak in Geometry and Word problems - so I re-did the guides.
April:
I took a break from my office in order to study 8-10 hours everyday.
I started practising Quant from the OG again (5 hours - 30 Questions and Analysis in the manner in which you have stated on all your blogs about how to analyse problems)
I practised Verbal for 3 hours (1 hour reading, 1 hour One OG RC passage and 1 hour 6 SC questions).
On the last 2 days before the exam,
I did the entire Quant and Verbal (except CR) portion online on GMAT.Wiley.com so as to be ready for an online experience.
I was feeling good. I didn't take the GMAT prep test because I knew that I would re-appear and wanted to save the test.
My feelings during the test:
I started with the Verbal portion. Except for an RC passage that I found astonishingly difficult, I was really having fun out there and finished the Verbal portion with 8 mins to spare.
I don't know what went wrong with the Quant portion, but here too, I was enjoying myself. In retrospect, I realise that I might have made a lot of mistakes early on and the result was that I got a lot of easy questions and finished with the Math portion with about 6 mins to spare.
Re-Take Strategy:
I am going to tell you more about myself so that you can understand me as a learner and as a person and can probably guide me better.
Historically,
I have been very good at Math. I scored a 100/100 on India's famous Class X board exams.
My Math scores dropped in Grade XI as I wanted to for a bit before the infamous Grade XII began.
I scored 98/100 in Maths on Class XII board exams.
I went to Narsee Monjee College of Commerce and Economics, University of Bombay where I earned my degree in Accountancy and Finance (A quant intensive course).
I interned at the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay (India's Federal Reserve) while I was in college and the internship too required me to work around numbers.
I got my first job at Ernst and Young, Bombay in the risk advisory department. The job required a fair mix of number crunching, accounting and logic.
I came back to my native town of Ludhiana, an industrial town in North India in 2015 and put up a 2.5 Million USD $ Box-manufacturing plant in a record time of 7 months from erection to commissioning.
I operated the plant for about 3 years and ensured greater-than-industry profit levels before I handed it over to my father in April to take a 15-day break for my GMAT.
I'm sorry that you had to read all of what I've written above, but the core is that it is very difficult for me to digest my sub-par Quant score. I've always done very well on tests and Maths has always been a strength. I plan to take a 2-month break to focus mainly on Quant and CR and practice SC and RC on the side.
However, I don't know what to do. I am very comfortable with the MGMAT guides and the OG. But when I look at problems from sites such as the GMAT club, I'm slightly taken aback. I have never shied away from working hard, and I know I can beat the Quant portion. Right now, I'm clueless about what I do. I don't know what my weaknesses in the Quant section are. I don't want to re-do the Guides and the OG ONLY because I remember all the answers and can answer even before reading the questions.
Should I take a MGMAT Quant to judge my weaknesses OR should I order an ESR report?
I would really appreciate a honest feedback.
Thank you in advance.
Parth Jain