All,
Prior to buying any of the Manhattan books, I just looked at the OG for a week and a half. I then realized I was an idiot and would need to start from scatch. I bought all the Manhattan books. Prior to going through each of them, I took one of the CATs to see where I stood. My minimum goal prior to starting this adventure was to score 650. Anything over 700 would be outstanding.
CAT #1 (4/29): Q-35 / V-32 / 560
I did not do the essay and the IR was not available at the time. I actually wasn't discouraged by the 560. Considering I really hadn't studied and my current work does not even touch the realm of the material in these tests, I figured it wasn't a bad starting spot.
I diligently worked through the Manhattan books. After working through each one, I went back again and hit the weak spot. I felt good that I was understanding the concepts. I continued to review my notes and the books after the initial 9 weeks it took to get through the books. Then it was time for test numer #2....
CAT #2 (8/5): Q-35 / V-31 / 550
Obviously, after 3 months of studying, I went into a rage after seeing the results. I woke up the next morning with a pretty bad hangover. I reviewed the exam the next day to see where it went wrong. On the quant side, I just got off to a terrible start. I know you can recover, but I remember thinking the questions are just too easy (which meant I was answering the previous ones wrong). I felt rushed by the time, and it sort of snow-balled to an extent. To be honest, it felt like all the questions being asked were a weakness of mine. Unlucky? I don't know.
Regarding the verbal, I just made numerous stupid mistakes. I think I was fatigued and it showed. Some of my answers were embarassing. I think part of the reason I suffered so much on the verbal was I actually took the IR and Essay. That extra hour taxes the brain more than I thought.
Overall, I just did not execute. I wasn't in the Q&A mode. I wasn't making 'educated' guesses. Things just went poorly. I decided I would just hammer myself with the OG for a week and then give it another go. The next 6 days I would did 40 problems (combo of quant and verb) every night. I tried to get familiar with making good decisions. I had the concepts at this point, but I didn't execute them on Test #2. After a week, I was in a better mind set and ready to see what could happen.
CAT #3 (4/29): Q-42 / V-38 / 660
I was estatic when I got the results back from this test. Once again, I started with the essay and IR. This time, I tried not to be so mentally drained with the essay and IR. I think I'll do fine on the essay. My IR is terrible right now, but I've put little practice into it (nor did I know you need to answer all questions right to receive full credit until today).
During the test, I didn't feel good about the quant at all. I had numerous problems where I was clueless. I suppose that is good to a certain extent (better than seeing easy problem after easy problem), but I wasn't in the 'zone.' I did do a better job of managing my time.
After reviewing the results, I noted 4 problems that I guessed on and got right. Obviously, I guessed on other and got them wrong, but I'm a little concerned these 4 problems might have been that added boost to my score. To be perfectly honest, I didn't feel like I did much better than the previous week. Could I have just 'lucked' out here?
Regarding the verbal, I was simply more focused this time and got to a point where I thought I was in that 'zone'. I was making good decisions. Any 'tough' problems were worked out to where I was fairly confident I had two possible answers that could be right. I wasn't fatigued and I paced myself really well.
Bottom line, has anyone seen weird results such as mine? Study for 3 months and see no improvement, but then swich up studying habbits (doing problems / not concepts) and jumping 100 points in a week? I suppose the only way to see if this is just an extereme outlier is to take another test next week. That is what I intend on doing.