Sorry we're late getting back to you - it's been a crazy week (see my new sticky at the top of this folder if you haven't already heard why)!
Yes it does sound like timing was an issue on quant - having to guess on 6 at the end definitely dropped your score. Verbal possibly is a more minor timing issue, but I've met with lots of students who have finished each section on time and still had significant timing issues - so just finishing on time or almost on time isn't a guarantee that there isn't a timing issue.
Use the below article to analyze your most recent MGMAT practice test:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... ice-tests/Then come back here and tell us your analysis (not just the raw data, please - also tell us what you think it means :)
Next, read this article on timing and start doing what it says:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... anagement/We'll give you additional advice once we have your test analysis.
Also, you may want to bounce your situation off of an admissions consultant. I agree that if you apply to a school with an average score of, say, 710, then a 680 won't *boost* you, but I don't think it'll keep you out either. Most schools use the GMAT as a "threshold" indicator - get a high enough score and then they'll make the decision on other factors. If you've got some truly stellar things on the rest of your app, the 680 may be fine. Serving on a board sounds pretty stellar to me - I don't know how many people come in with something like that. (But I'm not an admissions person - so you should really ask an admissions consultant!)
Quote:
The only thing that was keeping me from taking a re-test was the possiblity of a lower score the second time around. In the eventuality that that does happen and I realize during the exam that this aint going so good, I plan on not reporting my scores.
A few notes. You can cancel your scores at the end of the test, but it will still show up on your report as a cancelled score - so the schools will still know you were there. The vast majority of schools look at the highest score, even if that was from the first test, so there isn't any real downside to taking it again. (Again, talk to an admissions consultant.)
Finally, the better you do on this test, the harder you think it was (because think about it - if you totally perform at your peak level, that test is going to be giving you some seriously hard questions for whatever your level is!). I've talked to numerous students who debated cancelling their scores but didn't and ended up scoring 700+. I'm telling you this just because we're not really the best judges of how we're doing in the middle of the test - it's really hard to tell.
Re: the notebook thing during the test - yes, they take it away and then bring you a new one. Really annoying. Train yourself to be able to use only one booklet for the entire quant section (it shouldn't be hard if you are organized - you have an average of nearly a quarter page for every problem). Then turn in your booklet at the break between quant and verbal and start verbal with a fresh booklet.