I apologize for the delay in response; we've been short-staffed.
By "Fundamentals," do you mean the Foundations of Math and Verbal materials?
For RC, here are some good sources from which to read:
http://magazine.uchicago.edu/ - particularly articles in the "Investigations" tab
http://harvardmagazine.com/http://sciam.com/And here are some articles to get you started:
http://www.beatthegmat.com/mba/2010/04/ ... mp-passagehttp://www.beatthegmat.com/mba/2010/07/ ... rc-passagehttp://www.beatthegmat.com/mba/2010/09/ ... ading-compFor CR, read this article to start:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/articles/C ... n-type.cfmIt talks about what you want to be able to do with CR in general - how to approach these, and the kinds of questions to ask yourself as you study each type.
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I have read and heard from many students that MGMAT CAT Verbal is easier than the real GMAT, and students do poorly in the real Verbal GMAT.
Be very careful what you read online. The nutshell: some people are always going to do more poorly on the real thing than they did on practice tests - I've been teaching GMAT for 15 years and that's always been the case. The difference now: it's very easy to then find others online in the same situation and speculate that there's some big trend when nothing has really changed.
Read this thread:
huge-gap-in-gmatprep-test-score-and-actual-gmat-score-t12739.htmlWe ask our students to tell us their results, and we do extensive analysis on the data. There is no huge variance, up OR down, on either quant or verbal, from last MGMAT CAT to official test. Obviously, some individuals score higher or lower on the official CAT compared to their last MGMAT CAT - but the individual differences balance out across the entire pool. There isn't a skew one way or the other across all students.
In terms of what practice questions to use, I do agree that you should use official questions as much as possible for anything - there's nothing like the real thing. Note that you don't need a thousand questions - make sure that you're not wasting your questions by blowing through them without taking the time to truly analyze / dig into each question, and you'll be fine with the existing OG questions.
Your plan looks good in general. If you have flexibility in your schedule, try to pick a class that will skip a week or two because of some holiday(s). That gives you more time to do homework / practice and still have your teachers available to ask questions. :)
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Also, is 6 months enough for a complete GMAT preparation and achieve a score of 700+ assuming that I am an average candidate with good analytical skills.
There's no way to answer this without more data. What's your starting score? What are your strengths and weaknesses? Etc. Generally speaking, though, most people study for 3-4 months, so 6 months is a good chunk of time. Make sure that you don't burn out though - if you're feeling sick of it one day, take that day off. And if you're planning to work for 6 months, you don't need to study for 5-6 hours per day every single week-end.