Hi Stacey,
Thanks a lot for your response! Over the last 2-3 days, I have read those 2 articles you referred to and lots of posts written by none other than yourself.
I spent quite a few hours (over 5+) analyzing the results (using one of the best source on how to analyze result by yourself:
http://www.manhattangmat.com/blog/index ... ice-tests/)
For Quant:
1. I found that I was poor in Overlapping sets (I had specifically practiced them but like 2 weeks ago), Fractions Decimals Percentages and Inequalities. Out of these, I made silly mistakes in the last 2 areas and the first one is indeed my weakness - not so much the content but the approach or process.
2. My accuracy in Quant was higher but the difficulty level of questions answered correctly was only 680, so need to work on 700-800 level questions to make sure that I improve my accuracy (~44%) on these. Let me know if I am correct?
3. The most insightful finding was that out of 8 questions on which I spent more than 3-3.5 mins, I got 7 wrong. Clearly, I should have guessed and moved on once I was unable to get a feeling that I am on right track. I have been working on developing the 1 minute sense (i.e. to have this feeling that you have spent 1 min on this question without constantly looking at the time), this is esp. useful in quant because it is very easy to zone out and take the problem head on at severe costs. In these questions, I could feel that I have spent more than 1 min and still I have not found strong clues about how to proceed. At about 1.5 min mark (in my mind), I should have guessed and moved on.
For Verbal:
1. I found that I was poor in RC as compared to SC and CR as per the difficulty level of questions. Although, my accuracy in RC (58%) is more than my accuracy in SC (47%) and CR (50%) level of difficulty of correct answers is lower for RC (680) than for SC (720) or CR (710). I think this is very insightful. You want to get the difficult questions as quickly as possible during the exam and then do your best to stay at that difficulty level even though this could mean that your accuracy is between 45-55% .
Please let me know what advice would you give me based on this analysis. For Verbal: I still have SC foundations book to finish. For CR and RC, I have just started practicing them. So, over the next 3-4 weeks, I should be getting better. For Quant: I am indeed surprised that I could only correctly answer 680 level questions, need to be cautious of silly mistake and this can go upto 720 I think.
Quote:
Did you do the essays? If not, do them in future. Skipping the essays can cause your multiple choice score to be artificially inflated (because it's tiring to write essays for an hour first!).
No, I did not include the essays but will do that going forward.
Also, this what I found as general response for my questions while researching in the last 2-3 days.
Q1: While researching on several forums, I found that quite a few people stated that they found quant to be slightly more difficult than actual GMAT. MGMAT's staff mentioned that they have heard just as many people saying that it is more difficult as they have people saying that it is slightly easier. IMO, I think quant was not difficult due to tricks but more computational, more steps required to get the answer.
Q2: Well, after doing LSAT CR questions, I think MGMAT CR is just fine (and much better). I mean CR can get really complex due to several steps in building the logic. CR questions that I got wrong in MGMAT 1 were 750 level on average. I think for anyone aiming for 750 you should be focusing on CR from other sources than just OG. MGMAT content looks much more manageable to me vs. LSAT CR questions
Q3: Accuracy for anyone taking the test will be in the region of 45-55%. The catch is basically to reach higher difficulty questions quickly so that you maintain this accuracy rate for 750+ questions.
Q4: Currently, working on Verbal. RC99 (4 passages per day), CR questions (from GMAT Club and other forums - keeping OG for next week), SC: stuck at idioms chapter in MGMAT book :( I do practice quant everyday, around 15 DS questions and 5-10 PS. Keeping a combined error log for everything that I get wrong or get right but not sure if I can get it right next time.
Q5: Got a response that in general LSAT material can be used. started working on that from yesterday, need to get a hang of LSAT questions as they seems different that GMAT ones in some inexplicable ways (or maybe its just playing with my mind)
Thanks again!