I recently completed Manhattan CATs 2, 3, and 4.
CAT 2 (670, 43Q, 38V, 3.1 IR, no AWA)
CAT 3 (720, 44Q, 45V, no AWA/IR)
CAT 4 (700, 45Q, 40V, 3.73 IR, full test)
I suppose my quant is steadily creeping up again, but I am concerned about fluctuations in my verbal score. During CAT 2, I knew I was too tired to focus properly, so I don't *think* the 38V is a big deal. However, I'm concerned about the 5-point difference between CATs 3 and 4. I didn't expect a 5-point drop.
Mental fatigue may have been a factor due to completing my first full exam after a while. I also stopped a few times during CAT 3 to just chill. The words were swimming on the page, so I knew I needed a break. I didn't feel that way this time around and don't think it's a good idea to get into the habit of taking for granted that I'll have extra time. For comparison, I finished 19 minutes early on CAT 4 (no real breaks, may have waited a few seconds to start some questions) and 10 minutes early on CAT 3 (2-3 breaks several minutes long). I did not rush through either verbal section.
On CAT 3, I started off with the first 6 verbal questions right and ended with the last 14 right (-7, all 700-800). On CAT 4, I started with the first 8 and only the last 1 right. For this test, had a string of correct responses from 31 to 38 and was "99%" from 35 to 38. I got 39 wrong (700-800), which dropped me to "93%," and 40 wrong (600-700), which dropped me to "89%." Although I got the last question right, I was only able to climb back to "90%." Why would my percentile be so sensitive to 1 missed 700+ question after a string of 8 correct responses and so near to the end of the section? And to the one 600+ question I got wrong? That seems like a huge swing, considering I was "99%" for 19 questions (40V). By contrast, I was "99%" for 17 questions (45V) on CAT 3, although a greater percentage of those questions were consecutive and toward the end of the test.
I know that MGMAT is only an approximation, but if I had gotten the last 2 questions right, would my estimated percentile for verbal be around 95th instead?
I guess I really just want to know how much room I have for error. Am I screwed if I miss a few questions at the end, despite consistently good performance prior to that? Eight missed questions is about 80% accuracy on verbal, but that doesn't seem to be enough for a 45. Do you know whether people can get 45 with 8 missed questions on your CATs or on the official GMAT?
Thank you.