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GMAT Study Plan - How to Start your GMAT Prep

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GMAT Study Plan - How to Start your GMAT Prep [#permalink] New post 10 Jul 2009, 02:17
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GMAT Study Plan for New GMAT Test Takers

Hope you find this study plan helpful - please let me know any of your tips or suggestions for those just starting out on their GMAT Journey


Improvement: 50-150 points depending on the starting point
Concept: You are just starting your GMAT journey and need the shortest way to a good GMAT Score
Recommended for:
  • GMAT Novices
  • Stagnant gmat test-takers
No GMAT Prep Requirements

Other Study Plans

Advanced Study Plan: Go from 650 to 700+
Ultimate Verbal plan
How to go from Q44 to Q50
How to Improve your Quant from Q30 to Q40
How to improve verbal from V30 to V40


Hello - welcome to GMAT Club.
If you are new to GMAT and looking how to start and dip your toe in the water - this is the right place to start.

Step 1: First, You should familiarize yourself with the GMAT structure and principles if you have not done so already - see GMAT FAQ for details. You can also visit http://www.mba.com and poke around. While you are there - go ahead and download GMATPrep - 2 practice tests released by makers of the GMAT. These 2 tests contain real GMAT questions, follow real GMAT principles, and are the best at estimating your GMAT score at any point in time..


Step 2: Take a practice test to find out how far you are from your target . Many believe it is a good use of one of the free GMAT Prep tests (I'll tell you to actually get more than 2 tests out of the package later). The main reason it is a good use is that you can see your starting point (now) and then compare it against the ending (taking GMAT). Alternatively you can use any other computer adaptive test from Princeton, Kaplan, Manhattan, or others and then use GMAT Score Estimator/Calculator to find your real GMAT equivalent. If you are offered to write an Essay (AWA) - skip it. For listing of all available GMAT tests - see all-gmat-cat-practice-tests-links-prices-reviews-77460.html

Step 3: Find out what GMAT score you actually need. Just to give you an idea - You need 700 for Top 10 schools, 680 for Top 20, and 650 for Top 50 to pass - meaning your score should not be an issue and you will need something 50 points higher to actually stand out. Most people are able to improve between 50 and 150 points - that should give you an estimate of what you can count on based on the diagnostic test you just took.

Step 4: Figure out your weaknesses - take a look at your practice test score and note the raw score distribution (you will get one three digit score such as 600 and 2 two-digit scores such as 35, 40 - those two are your raw scores for each of the sections. They have corresponding percentiles). See how you rank in each. Also, do a basic mistake analysis and understand which question types are the most challenging for you. The options are PS, DS, CR, RC, SC and potentially even more detailed such as probability, or assumption questions, etc. Use this information to build your study plan.

Step 5: Design your study plan - finally!
You need to build up your toolkit and get some ammo for the GMAT. You will need books to review fundamentals/test taking strategies and GMAT tests to practice those strategies and also evaluate your prep level. For GMAT book reviews, see this discussion: top-gmat-prep-books-guides-reviews-comments-77703.html
For collection of all GMAT Tests available today: all-gmat-cat-practice-tests-links-prices-reviews-77460.html
Finally - chart/plot/graph your study plan - use this calendar format

Step 6: Avoid typical GMAT prep mistakes and pitfalls.
Here is the most common one I see - jumping into questions and tests completely unprepared and expecting results/miracles. GMAT consists of several layers and it is important to master each one before moving on to the next - think of it as of Maslow's hierarchy of needs. There is no use in satisfying your social needs before you can take care of basic needs such as safety and food. The same is here, if you don't know the underlying principles that GMAT is testing (such as grammar, arithmetic, etc) there is no use in solving hundreds of questions or taking multiple GMAT tests. This means that if English is not your native language, you should not work on the RC strategies if you can't understand half of the passage - you need to get comfortable reading long passages of text before moving on. To illustrate this principle, consider the following hierarchy for the GMAT:

Attachment:
gmat pyramid.gif
gmat pyramid.gif [ 12.6 KiB | Viewed 921689 times ]

In the General Knowledge stage cover basics for a chapter/section/area
In the Question Strategies stage start practicing questions either for the area you just covered or for an entire section but don't attempt questions for sections you have not covered yet
In the Test Strategies start taking full length tests and practice on putting questions and knowledge together



Here are two of the most common GMAT study plans used by GMAT Club Members:


Plan 1: The Easy/Ultimate option - get the full collection of the MGMAT Guides or Veritas Prep Guides + OG 13. The book bundles come with everything you need and both are fully all-inclusive in terms of what you need. My only other suggestion is to get the MGMAT Roadmap which serves a collection of study-related tips. This is a reliable/proven approach with good results. The cost will be $150-300.


Plan 2:
Use one of the general guidebooks i.e. Kaplan Premiere Book as a starting point (see here for a full list of recommended books) to learn basic concepts and strategies. You can see how you perform on the Kaplan tests after going through the Premiere book. (Note that Kaplan scores are sometimes off compared to the real GMAT, so don't get too hung up on it).

Month 1
  • Start with Math section first and focus just on math alone (you can do both math and verbal but I suggest you put all attention into one). Plan to spend 4 weeks on it.
  • Start using an Error Log - keep track of your mistakes and guesses -this will become your study guide in Month 3.
  • Optional Step: If you are feeling the load is too heavy and you are really weak in Math - get MGMAT Math Foundations book; it is great in providing a more general overview of math concepts.
  • At the same time, start reading GMAT Fiction (see below for details on what it is for)
  • Get involved with the Math Forum - you will learn a lot esp. when you try to teach someone or explain something
  • After you are done with the math section - start taking the math portion of the tests you have.
  • Evaluate results and decided if you need to spend more time in Math and patch up certain weak areas or move on to Verbal. This decision will be based on your target GMAT score. If you are looking for high 600's and 700's, I would not move past Quant unless I was able to score around Q44 (again Kaplan tests excluded as they are much harder)
  • If you need additional help in Quant - refer to the Math Resources on GMATClub or the GMAT Math Books section. In particular Manhattan GMAT Number Properties book comes highly recommended by many members. Another book you may consider is the PR 1012 - it contains targeted GMAT practice questions, which could be helpful in honing one's skills.
  • If you are comfortable with Quant but want to get to Q50+, use the GMAT Club Tests - they contain only hard questions and were designed as practice for high-level math scorers.

Month 2
  • Start working on the Verbal section. You can start with any section, but my suggestion would be to tackle Sentence Correction first
  • Error Log!
  • Sentence Correction Optional Step: If you are not a native speaker, you will need a good grammar book that steps beyond GMAT and gives you a strong background that you can use as a foundation for GMAT-specific books. Several grammar books are recommended on the Forum (best-gmat-grammar-book-for-international-students-79934.html). We have created a book specifically for this need - Ultimate GMAT Grammar (it covers all of the tested grammar topics on the GMAT, plus a bit more concepts that international students seem to struggle the most (articles, etc)). Other books to consider are Kaplan Verbal Foundations and MGMAT Verbal Foundations - they are very well written but still not as detailed as Ultimate GMAT Grammar. This is for you to decide how much help you need or how much time you have. Also, take a look at GMAT Club's Verbal Resources for many copies of study notes.
  • For your verbal practice, you can start with Kaplan Verbal Workbook - it has good strategies. However a very good alternative is the PowerScore Verbal Bible - i would say it is a good notch higher in terms of value and score improvement. It covers SC, CR, and RC.
  • Optional Step: A large number of GMAT Club members actually skip the step above and instead use specialized books to tackle each of the questions types. The books they use are:
    • Sentence Correction - either MGMAT SC or PowerScore SC
    • Critical Reasoning - either MGMAT CR or PowerScore CR
    • Reading Comprehension - MGMAT RC
    • Note1: MGMAT CR and MGMAT SC come without any practice questions. Instead they refer to questions in the Official Guide 12 and OG Verbal, so you must have those two books to practice and preferably should not have covered it in the past. On the positive note - all Manhattan books come with access to 6 online CAT tests, so you should buy at least one Manhattan GMAT book (any one of them).
    • Note2: This approach of specialized prep takes closer to 2 months for verbal
  • Critical Reasoning Optional Step: If you need additional help with Critical Reasoning - Do not get both PowerScore CR and Manhattan GMAT CR - the books are virtually identical (not really but kind of). Instead you can again use the PR 1012 book for targeted practice with Assumption or Conclusion questions or you can go very heavy weight and use LSAT books, but that's a tad too hardcore and usually unnecessary.
  • Reading Comprehension is often the hardest areas to conquer - there are no clear rules and it is all about understanding of the passage. Unless you strongly feel that Reading is your forte, I would recommend you pick up a reading habit for the time being. I have written a large post on what I call GMAT Fiction and its benefits - take a look. I felt that reading books was a big contributor to my SC and RC abilities. There are no downsides to this really - worst thing possible is that you would have read some great books. And yes - make sure you read them during your low productivity time (at night, during transit, etc).
  • Verbal forum should be your hobby by now :)
  • Take the verbal-only portion of the tests to evaluate your progress (compare to how you did in the diagnostic test).

Month 3
  • This month should be spent on 2 things: taking full length tests (polishing your test taking techniques, timing, stamina) and Reviewing your error log (going through your weaknesses, making sure you understand why you keep making mistakes and how to solve every problem you encountered). You can start using Error log earlier than this by the way - the earlier the better.
  • Schedule your test if you have not done so already.
  • Start taking full length tests (including AWA) - this is important for your test stamina. Plan to spend a Saturday on this and then subsequent test review.
  • Spend a few weeks taking tests and drilling down into your areas of weakness. Create a "black list of questions" that you continue to struggle with and find a way to solve them with minimal mental effort.



!
Common Mistakes with GMAT preparation
1: Rushing to take tests before learning anything - waste of tests
2: Starting with the Official Guide - waste of official GMAT questions
3: Giving GMAT the worst time of the day - studying after a long day
4: Skipping basics and rushing to advanced topics
5: Starting to prepare with poor English proficiency



Other thoughts/suggestions:
A recommendation which seems to be working for me... SUDOKU and RUBIK's CUBE...! Bit abstract just like your recommendation to read GMAT fiction... these to me have been working as priming tools... by DestinyChild

How long should you prep really?


The study plan above suggests 3 months, and that's probably 10-15 hours per week (2 hrs/work day and 5 hours on the weekend).
Over 3 months, that's about 120 - 180 hours, which includes reading some books, so the true study time is probably 80 - 120 hrs.

Here is some useful information from about 8,000 users GMAC surveyed earlier this year - you can see a general relationship though of course there is no guarantee since we don't know the study habits or the starting level.
Image
There is a typo in the label for the second bar from the right; it should be 600-690



There is not enough data to do a detailed analysis but here is the distribution of the amount of time the 8,000 test takers used
Image
Image
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Last edited by bb on 22 May 2013, 11:06, edited 26 times in total.
Adding more links
Kaplan GMAT Prep Discount CodesKnewton GMAT Discount CodesVeritas Prep GMAT Discount Codes
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 20 Jul 2009, 18:14
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How long should you prep really?


The study plan above suggests 3 months, and that's probably 10-15 hours per week (2 hrs/work day and 5 hours on the weekend).
Over 3 months, that's about 120 - 180 hours, which includes reading some books, so the true study time is probably 80 - 120 hrs.

Here is some useful information from about 8,000 users GMAC surveyed earlier this year - you can see a general relationship though of course there is no guarantee since we don't know the study habits or the starting level.
Attachment:
AvgNumStudyHours.png
AvgNumStudyHours.png [ 6.85 KiB | Viewed 931833 times ]
There is a typo in the label for the second bar from the right; it should be 600-690



There is not enough data to do a detailed analysis but here is the distribution of the amount of time the 8,000 test takers used
Attachment:
HoursOfPrep.png
HoursOfPrep.png [ 8.89 KiB | Viewed 878643 times ]
Attachment:
WeeksOfPrep.png
WeeksOfPrep.png [ 10.14 KiB | Viewed 931921 times ]

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Last edited by bb on 20 Aug 2010, 21:57, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 20 Jul 2009, 19:56
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bipolarbear wrote:
excellent post bb.
One thing I would emphasize is how quickly procrastination time goes by. It is way too easy to begin studying with 3 months left, take a short break, and resume studying with only weeks left. On the one hand, it seems like one month is plenty of time to study for just a single test, but after really starting, you realize that you have a LOT to cover and begin panicking. I know that's the case with me. 2 months ago I thought I had an eternity to study, but a couple of days ago I realized I am screwed and wish I had more time. :(


Thank you!
Great point - the message should be clear: If you only have 3 months left and need 700+ score - you are already late!
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 20 Jul 2009, 18:49
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excellent post bb.
One thing I would emphasize is how quickly procrastination time goes by. It is way too easy to begin studying with 3 months left, take a short break, and resume studying with only weeks left. On the one hand, it seems like one month is plenty of time to study for just a single test, but after really starting, you realize that you have a LOT to cover and begin panicking. I know that's the case with me. 2 months ago I thought I had an eternity to study, but a couple of days ago I realized I am screwed and wish I had more time. :(
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 23 Jul 2009, 00:16
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gmanjesh wrote:
BB you might want to edit the following sentence

"Note1: MGMAT CR and MGMAT SC come without any practice questions. Instead they refer to questions in the Official Guide 12 and OG Verbal, so you must buy that book to practice and preferably should not have covered it in the past. On the positive note - all Manhattan books come with access to 6 online CAT tests, so you should buy at least one Manhattan GMAT book (any one of them)."


MGMAT CR and RC needs both OG and the Verbal Review books. that was the case with MGMAT 3rd ed not sure about the 4th, but I assume its the same


Thank You!
I believe the 4th edition of the MGMAT RC does not rely on the Official Guide anymore but that book is packed and I can't get to it to confirm...
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 29 Jul 2009, 23:57
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I got a 720 after 3 months of studying, but I started "truly" studying after I got a 650 on the first real GMAT I took. When I took the GMAT the first time, I didn't really study much for it and told myself "If I get anything over a 650, then I retake and really study for it. So I got the 650 and studied for 3 months like crazy (I mean truly like crazy, I think I posted over 700 posts on here in that 3 month time).

My 3 month experience can't be compared to someone starting from scratch. I had already experienced one real test day which is a huge advantage.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 05 Apr 2010, 23:16
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smoke152000 wrote:
bb...

Thanks for the posts. I began my studying with the OG 11. As I completed the first 120 question with an 84%, I reviewed this forum and am now transferring to other materials per the recommendation from test takers.

I have the following guides what order to you recommend starting from:

1. Cracking the GMAT
2. Kaplan GMAT Premier Program 2009 Ed
3. MGMAT Guides
4. OG 11

Please provide your thoughts.



You can just go through the MGMAT Guides along with the OG and that should be plenty. If you want, you can cover the Kaplan book first but throw away the Cracking thing.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 10 Aug 2009, 10:13
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Try here: gmat-study-plan-go-from-650-to-80235.html
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 23 Dec 2009, 02:57
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Hello Fellows!

I would like to share my study plan with you. It is in MS Excell, so you may use it for yourself as well (in case it is a good one :) )
And of course your comments are welcome.

I have spent around 1 month studying the GMAT Club and want to say it is great! Based on this I've build my plan, made some shopping on Amazon (some books are still coming) and hope to avoid mistakes other fellows did and kindly shared their experience.

During my preparation I will also share my experience and report any success/mistakes I will make

Regards,
Krivoy Rog
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Re: GMAT Study Plan - How to Start your GMAT Prep [#permalink] New post 11 Jun 2012, 05:50
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Hi,

I think that the sixth edition is good enough to cover the basics. The princeton review is also a good alternative to cover math basics.

Regarding the OG there are few differences between the two books. However, the 13th edition includes the integrated reasoning part and this point is very important..

You'll find more relevant informations here : best-gmat-math-prep-books-reviews-recommendations-77291.html
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 24 Jul 2009, 07:42
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My friend has the book, will get it confirmed by tonight.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 29 Jul 2009, 23:20
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Hello All,

I have started preparing for GMAT from this week.

I plan to follow the 3 month approach suggested by BB. However need some advice from all of you on finalising my study schedule.

month 1 - math. I plan to use Kaplan for brushing up fundamentals and then doing section tests for practice.

month 2 - verbal. I will use Kaplan and section tests here as well. Reading fiction is a regular add-on to this.

month 3 - full length tests. I plan to give 3 tests in a week followed with a detailed analysis and error log. The tests from OG, Kaplan (advanced), mba, etc will be used in this phase.

I have a full time job as a Manager in a Research firm with a 50 hour/week schedule. I will try to take out 15-18 hours in a week for this preparation. ( Majorly on weekends)

Please help me tweak this schedule. I am pretty unsure about how to start. Also, if 15-18 hours a week for the next 3 months would be enough to get a 700+ score.

Looking forward to all your suggestions :)
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 06 Aug 2009, 23:49
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rookieR wrote:
Hey BB - need your comments on the schedule I have decided below....please :)
rookieR wrote:
Hello All,

I have started preparing for GMAT from this week.

I plan to follow the 3 month approach suggested by BB. However need some advice from all of you on finalising my study schedule.

month 1 - math. I plan to use Kaplan for brushing up fundamentals and then doing section tests for practice.

month 2 - verbal. I will use Kaplan and section tests here as well. Reading fiction is a regular add-on to this.

month 3 - full length tests. I plan to give 3 tests in a week followed with a detailed analysis and error log. The tests from OG, Kaplan (advanced), mba, etc will be used in this phase.

I have a full time job as a Manager in a Research firm with a 50 hour/week schedule. I will try to take out 15-18 hours in a week for this preparation. ( Majorly on weekends)

Please help me tweak this schedule. I am pretty unsure about how to start. Also, if 15-18 hours a week for the next 3 months would be enough to get a 700+ score.

Looking forward to all your suggestions :)


Looks pretty good. I would not push for 3 tests in a week - you will hate life and yourself :wink:
Do 1 or 2 on the weekends and then spend the week going through errors and possibly still taking just the quant or just the verbal portion.

Spend the "good" time on GMAT (mornings) rather than the "leftover" time (nights and lunch breaks).
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GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 10 Aug 2009, 14:12
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BB,

Just wondering, why do you recommend tackling SC first? I'm actually debating right now whether to go through the Powersore CR or the Manhattan SC book first, since both will cover the last half of my prep. I was planning on tackling SC last so that the rules will be fresher in my memory. Thanks!
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 10 Aug 2009, 15:18
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thescrappyone wrote:
BB,

Just wondering, why do you recommend tackling SC first? I'm actually debating right now whether to go through the Powersore CR or the Manhattan SC book first, since both will cover the last half of my prep. I was planning on tackling SC last so that the rules will be fresher in my memory. Thanks!


Good question - it does not matter which section per se you start with.
What matters is that You tackle the EASIEST section first and then dedicate the remaining time to the one you have the most issues with.

SC was the easiest for me, then CR, and RC was the hardest, so my "recommendation" follows that path.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 23 Sep 2009, 17:09
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toogood wrote:
I see for Manhattan, there are different books for Math. Don't they have only 1 book for Math?


There is Manhattan Review and Manhattan GMAT - two completely different companies and that confuses everyone.

It is usually the MGMAT Guides that are recommended.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 28 Sep 2009, 21:22
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WOW - you are are crazy :lol:
Two notes of caution - don't burn out and do not assume all the materials will do the job for you.
You must believe and fully dive into each book. Keep an error log and not move on until you are comfortable. I do think it is a heavy overkill - it is highly recommended to take less than 4-6 months to take the GMAT - otherwise you start forgetting what you have learned.



P.S. My mistake - the MGMAT Number properties book should be mentioned.
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2009, 10:41
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orsang8 wrote:
Good study plan. I have a question though. Whenever I do Kaplan CAT I see those hard probability/combination problem and I never get them right. Right now I am at 46 level with lots of silly mistakes. You think I should not worry about prob/comb problems? I am targeting for 49 Q as my verbal is weak.
Also I have taken 3 CAT and planning to do another 12 (total of 15). That should be enough right?


check out the recent debriefs half of them didnt get any probability/combination problem and the other half got a max of one or two which were suppose to be easy ... now ur target is 49 and u can afford to get 5-8 wrong for that score so if you can concentrate more on much more important topics like number properties .. inequalities and getting them right than spending on a topic like probability/combination which if at all appears is one or two and of moderate difficulty ... the problem with probability/combination problems are that they are tricky and unless u get a hold over the approach it can still be screwing in the exam ... if I were you and If i have problems with probability/combination, I would just work on MGMAT problems and problems from OG books and the ones which appear in the CAT exams you would take up later on and just hope for the best in the exam and concentrate more on the high frequency problems to make sure u dont screw up there ...

regarding the CAT exams ... the recent test takers have been most satisfied with the 6 exams of MGMAT and GMATPrep(atleast twice each one) ... so that would add upto 10 exams ... do take Kaplan but dont get discouraged by the low scores ...
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 01 Oct 2009, 22:24
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chiank wrote:
hey superman ,

study plan you have provided me above assumes how many hrs i will be need to study each week ?


I am talking about 20 hours a week
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey [#permalink] New post 04 Nov 2009, 08:54
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gottabwise wrote:
Can anyone offer tips for retention? I'm finding that I'll recognize different subtopics but won't necessarily remember a formula (ex. overlapping sets, motion problems). Right now I plan to review notes in addition to OG problems. DISCLAIMER: Not a quant person but not afraid of it either


Yep - have one for you: overlapping-sets-should-i-worry-78112.html
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Re: GMAT Study Plan for GMAT Novices - Start your GMAT Journey   [#permalink] 04 Nov 2009, 08:54
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