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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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Hi Harley,
Your story is quite inspirational for a person like me.
I gave the exam today and was shattered after seeing my verbal score of 28. i have always scored above 35 in all of mocks, moreover in gmat prep the verbal score hovered around 40.
i am in self doubt at present and would appreciate if you advice me how to improve the verbal score to at least 38.
Pls suggest an online course if required!!
Waiting for your response because i want to give the exam again as soon as possible.

Thanks in advance!!
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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Hi Harley, I actually was surprised to see another Ukrainian who took the gmat and scored well. Congratulations!

I am Ukrainian too. I read this post of yours some time ago. It was helpful.

Today I had my second gmat attempt. I took the gmat the first time a month ago and scored not as good as I would want to - 650. But today, I got 720! I am pretty happy about it. Didn't expect such a score.

Cheers!
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
zoloo wrote:
you are truly inspirational, my d-day is in less than a month. i was completely lost until i came through your post. earnestly admire your hard work and persistency and I wish i had your capability to devote yourself to something. truly agree with your point on Bunuel he is like a magician and solves adverse problems with few simple actions. by any chance if you are reading this bunuel, please lend me your brain just for an hour or so.

anyway, thank you for your great debrief you gave a legitimate reason to believe in myself once more and to fully commit myself on preparation. thank you again and again


Thanks for the kind words zoloo, I hope you will achieve your dream score ;)
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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kohli555 wrote:
Hi Harley,
Your story is quite inspirational for a person like me.
I gave the exam today and was shattered after seeing my verbal score of 28. i have always scored above 35 in all of mocks, moreover in gmat prep the verbal score hovered around 40.
i am in self doubt at present and would appreciate if you advice me how to improve the verbal score to at least 38.
Pls suggest an online course if required!!
Waiting for your response because i want to give the exam again as soon as possible.

Thanks in advance!!


Hello kohli555.
I never thought about myself as about a verbal specialist and because of this I wrote nothing about a Verbal part.

Here are my pieces of advice but take them with a grain of salt.

About CR
I have a logical mind and Critical reasoning has a trap for me. I never can understand why I should looking for some conclusion or premise. I can find an answer without all these stupid rituals. And I was right a lot of times. But a lot of times is like 50%, not more. And a sure thing we need more for a decent score.

I am not sure whether you heard about EGmat CR approach.
Long time I completely did not understand their approach about CR. Prethinking answer? How can I pre-think answer? I am not a Nostradamus: all I should do is read answers and find a correct one.
But I always struggle with BoldFace questions and in one moment start to read articles and recommendations about this type of questions. And almost all recommendations says: find the conclusion and it relations to boldface parts. That was the Damascene moment. EGMAT says smart things but invents not so cool term for this. It is not "pre-thinking" (don't know why but I always think that this pre-thinking of the answer) it is "finding a link" between premise and conclusion. That is it. We should find how one phrase connected to the conclusion. If you find it you can easily find an answer because it will affect this link.

About RC
I do not know why but I never met any advice about vocabulary. I think this is really important part of RC and CR. One word can easily change the answer. Learning all words from RC passages is too extreme and very often GMAC include words that you do not need at all. Shist, big tits (no this is not that you think about ;) this is the word from animals world, algae, aardvark and so on. You will meet such words in RC, but you can easily substitute it with X and solve the questions.
So for me I design three step process of solving RC passages:
1) Number of questions * 1:30 = Total time. Read and solve questions during the total time. If not have time - guess.
2) Read passage second time and make a second attempt on each question. Take as much time as want but you should give a correct answer.
3) Third attempt but with using a dictionary. Read unknow words and try to understand: is this word change something in your previous answer? If yes - you should remember this word.

After these steps, you can easily understand what is you problem: is it time issues or vocabulary issues.
For vocabulary issues, I recommend using Anki.

For time issues - only reading practice. But I never understand why people recommend reading some other sources. We preparing for GMAT so for reading practice we should use GMAT passages and during this practice we should answer the questions. No other practice can give your development in this type of questions. Don't waste your precious preparation time on other sources.

This is debatable claim, but this is only my unprofessional opinion so I hope you will forgive me my tone

For main idea questions, I met some interesting way of solution from Ron and I wrote the post about this way.
Try it - maybe it will help
how-to-solve-main-idea-questions-without-full-understanding-of-rc-203549.html#p1560699


This article from Magoosh was quite helpful for me.
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/curiosity- ... n-success/


Also, for me works this strategy from BB:
"I prefer this strategy (it helped me to get from inconsistent 50% correct RC to about 80-90% and eventually in a 96th percentile in verbal). It is outlined in various amount of details in Kaplan, PowerScore, and MGMAT books.

The idea is fairly straightforward - while critically reading the passage, you build a mental map, stopping to paraphrase after each paragraph and at the end to quickly summarize the passage. The strategy also involves critically reading - meaning constantly asking why a certain sentence/phrase is there, how they add to the development, and change the tone. It is important to master each of these elements before actually trying to put the entire strategy together. At first it does feel awkward - almost like wearing an armor suit that is clunky and seems useless - useless until GMAT shoots an arrow at you that is. Some of my challenges were questions such as - why do I need to stop (waste valuable time) and paraphrase the passage? (that answer comes in gradually). Also, how to actually stay interested and keep my thoughts from wandering around as I read? And finally - how to read critically? It took a while to learn to pick every word and notice subtle differences in tone (words such as, however, but, still, and examples help reveal author's true intention). I trusted the strategy and strangely enough it worked. I could see improvement within just a week. My performance became a lot more consistent and the strategy was becoming a lot more natural. I was also starting to catch little traps planted in the text and noticing tone a lot more than before."

About SC. All my last preparation month I read explanations of RON on manhattanprep.com. Ron is like Bunuel in Verbal ;)
Also, I really like his Thursdays with Ron on SC topic.

About OG and OVR questions. I did them all too, but I realized that many of answers I just remember or guess.
This is a wrong strategy for use OG questions.
You should see every mistake in question. It will be perfect if you will write all mistakes and after this compare your answer with OG explanations.
The same tactic with GMATPrep questions - find the explanation on Manhattan prep forum and read all comments - there is a lot of useful information.
Sometimes it is boring because they have from 1 to 6 pages of explanations for each question but it is worth it.

But I will be honest SC is my weakest topic in GMAT so take this piece of advice with even more then with a grain of salt ;)

Good luck in your preparations ;)
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
alexibiz wrote:
Hi Harley, I actually was surprised to see another Ukrainian who took the gmat and scored well. Congratulations!

I am Ukrainian too. I read this post of yours some time ago. It was helpful.

Today I had my second gmat attempt. I took the gmat the first time a month ago and scored not as good as I would want to - 650. But today, I got 720! I am pretty happy about it. Didn't expect such a score.

Cheers!


Hello alexibiz

My congratulations: this is the really cool result. So you will apply to some great schools I think ;)
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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kohli555,
RC is probably the most neglected section in Verbal. You can chalk out a strategy for RC and practice. RC takes time but once you have build the competency you can score well .

1. RC is an extension of CR .Many RC questions are about inference and conclusion.
2. Whenever you are reading a passage ,summarize each paragraph . So for example a passage consisting of 3 paragraphs of 8 lines each should be reduced to a summary of 10-12 lines .
3. The summary will help you in answering the purpose question .
4. If the passage is dense or contains technical terms replace the terms with variables such as x,y .It will make for a easier read. Never try to understand the meaning of each and every term of a technical passage.
GMAT expects you to answer questions based on the information based in passage.You do not need technical expertise to answer the questions
5. Finally ,if the answer choices appear abstract try to eliminate the wrong ones .

All the best for the test .
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
Hi Harley,

Thanks a lot for sparing your time and advising in detail.
I am sure your valuable experience and words will be very useful for me.
At last, could you please advice if Egmat online course is better or the aristotle SC grail book to improve the accuracy for SC.
I was considering to subscribe for Egmat online course because i have heard its really helpful to improve the SC accuracy.

Thanks for your co-operation!!
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
kohli555 wrote:
Hi Harley,

Thanks a lot for sparing your time and advising in detail.
I am sure your valuable experience and words will be very useful for me.
At last, could you please advice if Egmat online course is better or the aristotle SC grail book to improve the accuracy for SC.
I was considering to subscribe for Egmat online course because i have heard its really helpful to improve the SC accuracy.

Thanks for your co-operation!!

Hello kohli555.

I took EGmat on-demand course and I really liked it (SC part)
CR was quite good, but I think that CR bible is much better.
RC was useless, but IMHO this is a usual situation for all courses.

Aristotle SC book is not bad, but I think that it is insufficient for a 700+ result.
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
Congrats Harley1980 for a great score. Your debrief is a great motivation for the first timers. Thanks for that! :-D
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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Harley1980 wrote:
11. Forget about point 8. Motivation sucks! All you need is Discipline ;)
Put a really long password on your Facebook and other entertaining accounts. Something like “IReallyWantToPassGmatOn 7++” so when you will have a desire to break the discipline you will be reminded about your past decision and maybe you will return to GMAT stuff instead of Facebook surfing.
Also make a day plan in which put some everyday tasks such as
A) read 10 pages of Manhattan
B) make 10 SC
C) make 10 DS
and just check it day by day in excel: green cells if you make it and red if you don’t. The global picture with a lot of red cells will shame you and green picture will motivate you. Don't use reminders: you should see global picture of your discipline. But be realistic. Make a small plan but from littel tasks but do it every day: this is a way to create new habit.
Discipline is really important part. You need a motivation, but discipline is more important. Do not way for some inspiration: just sit and start to solve tasks and motivation will come to you ;)



i like this point of yours.
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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Congratulations Sergei. I know I am late (by a couple of years lol), but I am just too scared and nervous at the moment. Tomorrow's my 1st attempt. And I'm not too confident. I've got pathetic GMAT prep (1-6) scores. Your story is really motivating. Will probably utilize it the fullest capability for my next attempt.

A small request though, could you please share your error log? I wanna know how you maintained it throughout. Seems like a bit of a tiring task (or maybe I am imagining it wrong) to keep making the necessary notes and observations for every single question, I'd appreciate some insight.

Thanks!
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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Amazing post! Thanks a lot for sharing such an interesting and detailed story.

Something you said is very important for people like us, stories of 4 weeks and 700+ are not useful when you are struggling. They will make you feel worse.

We need to remember that we are not alone in this struggle, most of the people struggle and lots of people abandon before getting the dream score.

I am still struggling to get my score but I am 100% sure that if I don't give up I will get it.
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Re: 740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
This is one of the BEST SUCCESS STORY i have read... I might be late to congratulate you, but truly Very Inspiring write up . I could relate to your suggestion.Also the motivation part , I agree we all in our GMAT journey have times when we need to push ourselves harder and lift ourselves and start moving ahead. Thanks for sharing those links .All the BEST
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740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
Hey
I appreciate your time to share your valuable and insightful journey
I hope you the best for rest of your educational and professional life
I know its too late for writing, I am a new user
maybe by now, you have graduated from the school you applied 3 years ago,
Just all the time, my question is that?
DOES THE ATTEMPT WE PUT ON FOR THIS EXAM REALLY HELPFUL IN LATER LIFE?
To my opinion, this exam is very rubbish and wasting time. I wish I wouldn't have wasted my time reading bushtit reading about biology passages or humanitarian passages related to 1700 BC. (I mean ridiculous passages topic which does not have anything related to business!)

Harley1980 wrote:
I spend a lot of time on this site and read a lot of debriefs for motivation. After n-th debrief they are became a little similar because GMAT world not so big: we have like 15-20 courses (3-4 major) so here is not so much many possible ways of preparation.
So I decide not to write about usual things and my preferences for courses because it is quite obvious.
I will try to write about stuff with I usually didn't met at debriefs. So it will be like anti-debrief ;)

This post has been voted Best Debrief of 2015 and identified as one of the best and featured in the Best GMAT Stories - Period collection
-bb


1. Stick to one.
I listen/read 5 different GMAT courses. It was my huge mistake in hindsight because such strategy is quite stupid. Theory and fundamentals are the same in each course. Stick to one and don't search for some magic tablet. Time that you spend on second/third course can be much better invested in practice of solving questions.
With one exception: you can add to the main course EGmat SC - especially if you have some gaps in grammar. I did not advertise them and to prove it I can say that they have a lot of problem with customer service and technical quality of material (not critical but still as IT guy I was sometimes irritated). But their approach in learning change my view of English grammar.
I have a strange way of English learning. My native languages are Russian and Ukrainian and I didn't study English at school. When I found first normal job in which English was needed I start to learn it by myself but never learn grammar. I always wonder: if child don't learn grammar and speak easily why should I learn grammar? After 3-4 years I start quite confidently speak, have a big vocabulary baggage and easily watch movies with subtitles. Two years ago I pass Toefl on 101 from 120 but still didn't know any grammar rule. I have no idea what is present perfect and how to use it let alone future perfect or modifiers with or without comma.
So when I start to learn sentence correction in GMAT I cry a lot ;) GMAT explains me very earnestly why I need grammar )
I can't read Manhattan SC. I still don’t read it and think never will. For me it was like reading phonebook: rule, rule, rule. How normal person can remember all this stuff? EGmat saved me. They have really cool, fluent approach to load grammar into your brain, spoon by spoon :) I am really happy that I bought their course (CR part is ok but Powerscore is better and I don't understand who needs book for RC so it is definitely don't worth to by it)

2. Are you lucky?
I didn’t want to write this point in my previous debrief because of my low score. But now I can freely write it. Gmat is not a fair test. There is a lot of luck. In my first exam I met two combinatory tasks and zero of mixture tasks. In my second exam I met two mixture problem and zero combinatory. What if I hate mixture problems and adore combinatory tasks? I will have a gain in first exam and minus in second exam. How is this fair? But this is usual situation in any competition. When I was a dancer we have a way much more subjectiveness in our competitions. There was a lot of tears, disputes and hot debates. Judges are just people and they can’t simultaneously pay attention on 30 couples on dance floor. And one person ask my teacher: "Why I dance so cool and another couple so bad and I lost and they are win?" And teacher sais genius thing: “Was you worst 10 seconds of dance better than your competitors best 10 seconds? What if judge saw you worst moment and their best?”
Why I write all this stuff? For two remarks:
a) do not omit some parts of GMAT (probability, mixture, alphabetic, functions or some other weird stuff) – do so is a really dangerous practice. The more you omit the more you will need a luck on exam.
b) do not get despair if you didn’t pass from first/second time. There is a lot of luck in this exam. Just book the next exam, keep calm and continue your preparation.

3. Sacrilegious story about quant legend of this site ;)
It is really scare to write this point but I feel a moral obligation so I will do it ;) On this forum present a genius of math – it is a Bunuel. Now I adore his explanations and reread them even if done the task correctly. He is always find some unique, short and unexpected way of solution.
But when I after 4 months of preparation I start to use this site I did not understand his explanations. In 50% of cases at all. They were amazing (I felt it) but my level wasn’t enough for understand them. And when I read after his explanation 2-3 comments “Wow this is amazing” it was really depressing because I feel myself infinitely stupid (because all understand it except of me!).
So if you do not understand his explanations – it is ok. Just try to find another comment, another type of explanation. Do not give up if you do not understand, just continue to try to understand it and understanding will come.
I write it because for me it was a really difficult and shameful moment so I hope I will help to somebody to restore confidence if s/he will be in the same situation (also I hope that I not only one who had such problem ;)

4. Do not be greedy it is usually too much expensive finally
Do not save your GMAT prep test till final dates. It has an algorithm that will give you questions of your level. So when you make them at beginning of your preparation you will meet easy questions. When you increase your level you will meet another more difficult questions. This will be much more productive then use them one time before the exam.

5. Shock true about market leaders
Manhattan and Veritas prep CATs. IMO too hard. I never reach 700 in any of them test. So do not be upset if you such cases.

6. How I make mistake, lost money and why I glad because of this situation
GMATclub quant tests. Priceless. You should bought it one time because you should support amazing work of bb and Bunuel. I did this at first because I didn’t know how to make kudos ;) But I didn’t regret, such work should be supported.
IMO this is the most representative tests. Only GMAT prep better. For now I did 22 tests. Each of them are unique and gave me some new tricks.

7. You will not win by following some voodoo rituals. Sorry for harsh true ;)
At first test I did all correctly: food, timing, I was in center before test, I take shirt because there was a conditioner, I wash my face in breaks. What I have finally? 660 Second attempt: I have a headache, I forget water and food, and come to center 10 minutes before exam. And I did it. I don’t know why. But I think that all this stuff around the exam decide nothing. Knowledge, calmness and a little bit of luck - this are all you nned on exam, do not create too much pomp about this event because it worsen situation with your merves ;)
My suggest is to not bother too much about all this DDday stuff. (be careful it is only my opinion and I do not have any responsibility for my advice ;)

8. All you need is Motivation
Motivation. During the preparation I found this YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnJ-KJ ... rGs_6XfmmQ
IMO it is amazing because it gives me a lot of energy when I was desperately tired from all this stuff. There was a lot of such such periods so I rewatch this videos many times.

9. How I lost at least one month of preparation :(
I was really angry at myself when I realized that I read about error log but didn’t catch the main idea. I was reading all this articles and I have impression that you should enter your tasks in this excel and get some report that shows you there is your weak spots. Useless thing as for me. When I read article of MikeMcgarry https://magoosh.com/gre/2013/good-i-got-it-wrong/ and I did my own error log
Attachment:
Results.xlsx
in which I put task, put link from gmatclub and write what was my problem with this task. And after some days I try to solve it again.
I was shocked when I saw that some tasks I did 4-5 times wrong. I just can’t remember how to solve or there was a trick. After this “invention” my math went up really quickly. When you read decision this is not mean that you remember and understand it. After read of decision you must close decision and solve it from zero immediately. Sometimes you will not solve it and then you should reread it and again close solution and solve it from scratch.
Why I was angry? Because when I reread error log instructions I see that all guys write about it and I just miss that part. This mistake cost minimum month to time of my preparation.

10. Do you interesting in some cool stuff? Be careful it is addictive ;)
Between my official attempts I found this author:
https://www.manhattanprep.com/gmat/blog ... nprep-com/
Amazing stuff. Sadly that I found it only in last weeks. This is another big mistake (

11. Forget about point 8. Motivation sucks! All you need is Discipline ;)
Put a really long password on your Facebook and other entertaining accounts. Something like “IReallyWantToPassGmatOn 7++” so when you will have a desire to break the discipline you will be reminded about your past decision and maybe you will return to GMAT stuff instead of Facebook surfing.
Also make a day plan in which put some everyday tasks such as
A) read 10 pages of Manhattan
B) make 10 SC
C) make 10 DS
and just check it day by day in excel: green cells if you make it and red if you don’t. The global picture with a lot of red cells will shame you and green picture will motivate you. Don't use reminders: you should see global picture of your discipline. But be realistic. Make a small plan but from littel tasks but do it every day: this is a way to create new habit.
Discipline is really important part. You need a motivation, but discipline is more important. Do not way for some inspiration: just sit and start to solve tasks and motivation will come to you ;)

12. I do not believe them. And this helps me to sleep calmer ;)
I will not write how long I prepare for GMAT because it was too much. But I want to write about other thing. There is a lot of debriefs in which somebody write: 4 weeks and I received 7++. Such debriefs are killing me. I am already wrote about my English level – it was a disaster. My math was much worse. I didn’t learn math in school (
After 3-5 month of preparation I still says that \(2^2+2^3\) will be \(2^5\). And I 35 years old. And I do not have college. I will be honest I did not believe in myself when I was at beginning of my preparation.
I do not write it to boast. I write all this with only one purpose: if I did it any of you can do it. I have some friends who are much smarter, who have a college and work as consultants in prestige firms and know a lot of about GMAT. They say to me that "maybe GMAT is not for me", after my first attempt on 490. They say that "GMAT is like IQ test and one can not change it on more than 100 points". They did it not because they are bad friends. They did it because people do not believe in themselves and subsequently do not believe in anyone. But this is wrong life position.
Do not listen to anyone who told you that you can not do something in GMAT. Just continue learning. Big score it is matter of time and you stubbornness.

13. Secret from Nobelist
Watch this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1F3vmNeyOvU
I hope after watching you will understand why writing posts in style “+1 for C ” is useless and why writing your way of reasoning is priceless for you not for others.

14. Secret level of understanding
Another article from Mike Mcgarry https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/understan ... rformance/
Here is short excerpt:

Stages of Understanding
We could outline, roughly, six levels of understanding.
• Level #0 = no understanding, it’s completely foreign, does not compute
• Level #1 = looks familiar, “Yeah, I think I’ve seen that before,” some dim memory of how to do it
• Level #2 = with a little review, or some key hints or coaching, you can solve one of these problems.
• Level #3 = In the course of focused–practice, you can solve these problems consistently. If you are in the “zone” for that problem type, then you can do it.
• Level #4 = you can see the problem cold and, with no warm up, be able to solve it, time and time again. This happens in diverse-problem practice.
• Level #5 = you can not only solve the problem, but explain explicitly the strategy employed in solving the problem
• Level #6 = you can teach the problem clearly to someone who is struggling with how to work through it, and you can answer all their questions in a way they understand. (The old adage among teachers: “The best way to learn something is to teach it.”)

I think out level #7 = creating or chaning of tasks: if you struggle from DS tasks try to take a simple one and change it. Put off the type. Change the type. Add some conditions from another task. And try to understand how answer reacts on all this changes. It will be better to have friend to check your inventions. If you make one or two DS tasks in one topic by yourself – your level of understanding DS became amazing. I had a period when I did like a 15 of DS tasks and I realized how it is difficult to create a good real DS task. I realized that each word in task has a sense, that conditions are connected and you can easily back solve task because you can initially find the answer and after that check the conditions separately and a lot of another tricks.
But by changing of task I mean not to change “a” on “c” or “5” on “6” but make some serious changes.
But I suggest NOT to post your initial attempts on forum because it can became a disaster like my first attempt:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/is-x-y-x-y-e ... 95807.html
I change answer 4 times! In my own task. It was really shameful situation )

15. Hello Captain!
It is quite obvious but still worth to mention. Do not polish your strengths: pay attention on your weak spots. It is much easier to gain some scores by fixing weak spot then by increase quality of your strong side. I knew it rule by heart from business. But periodically catch myself on solving critical reasoning (strongest part) and put away geometry and algebra (weakiest part).

16. Really working way to 50. Money back guarantee!
Secret technic for transform 47 to 50. When you achieve 46-48 you already know all what you need to know about math. And only careless mistakes drag you down. I hear this method from Ron but it was about sentence correction. You need to pick one type of mistake (for example subject verb agreement) and go through all OG tasks but looking only for this mistake. That is it. It is desperately boring but you will train your eye for catching such errors.
It is boring ;) I give up after third type of error ;)

But I make a little trasformation of this method and apply it to math. If you make error log then you know with type of careless mistakes you did often. For example I love to forget what question asks and answer on something other. What I do with this mistake. All day before solving tasks I write question at the top of my list and draw a little square near it. Before submit task I force myself to reread question (and lose precious seconds for it I even now feel an inner protest about such stupid actions :) and check this square. But really reread this question! Only checking the square will not help. First times it is impossible. You try to control yourself but still make this mistake. It is like a magic. This exercise clearly show that we can not control ourselves. But after some days (if you not give up) it became a new habit. And you start check question automatically. And you win at least 1-2 task on the exam because of this habit.

17. RC
I do not know why but I never met any advice about vocabulary. And I think this is really important part of RC and CR. One word can easily solve the correctness of the answer. Learn all words from RC passages this is too extreme and very often GMAC include wrods that you do not need at all. Shist, big tits (no this is not that you think about ;) this is word from animals world, algae, aardvark and so on. You will meet such words in RC but you can easilty substitute it with X and solve the questions.
So for me I design three step process of solving RC passages:
1) Number of questions * 1:30 = Total time. Read and solve questions during the total time. If not have time - guess.
2) Read passage second time and make second attempt on each question. Take as much time as want but you should give correct answer.
3) Third attempt but with use of dictionary. Read unknow words and try to understand: is this word change something in your previous answer? If yes - you should remeber this word.

After these steps you can easily understand what is you problem: is it time issues or vocabulary issues.
For vocabulary issues I reccomend to use Anki.

For time issues - only reading practice. But I never understand why people recommend to read some other sources. We preparing for GMAT so for reading practice we should use GMAT passages and during this practice we should answer to the questions. No other practice can give your development in this type of questions. Don't waste your precious preparation time on other sources.

This is debatable claim but this is only my unprofessional opinion so I hope you will forgive me my tone )

18. How I completely fail my second attempt
I start really cool. I have a lot of time at 7 IR question and I relax. After some questions more I stuck with one problem and after this delay did not have a time for last three tasks. That was really careless and stupid. Result: IR 3.
Ok. I learn my lesson during the break and prepare myself morally to quant.

First quant task 1:30 - excellent. Second task and I see that this is simple. It is really simple but I can not do it. I write more one half of page and still can not do it. It was situation from nightmare you see that something scary happens and you can do nothing. I understand that I can not skip second simple task! And I watch on timer and realize that I spend more than 5 minutes on this task. Goodbye dreams about 1 round, hello second round and third attempt.
I lost this battle but decide to gain some experience and do not throw off my money. So let's do it for fun. I estimate this stupid task and continue my test. There were some more problems. Not so dramatic but I did this quant way to much worse than my previous attempt. Verbal? It was ok. My SC still sucks ( but there was some progress in comparison to first attempt.

When I saw my score I was shocked more than in my previous attempt: https://gmatclub.com/forum/unpleasant-s ... 01704.html
I was 100% sure that I received less than 660. I do not know what happens. This was really weird.

Read this article: https://www.manhattanprep.com/gmat/blog ... ill-creep/
and never estimate your success during the exam. This is really golden rule.

19. Be strong guys. This is last point ;)
Finally. If you are usual guy or gal without extra quant or verbal knowledge then you have a long way to go.
You can make it boring. You can make it sad. You can fill it with hate to all this cramming. Or you can love it and make this period interesting and fascinating.
GMAT can be a beast or can be a tool that makes your brain faster, smarter and more inventive.

And this is depends not from GMAT, not from your tutor, not from your course and not from this site. It is only your choice about what role GMAT will play in this period of your life.

I chose to love it and for now I have a little sadness that this period is over (
And a little joy too for sure.
Ok, I will be honest: mainly joy actually ;)

Good luck in your preparation guys. Hope I not boring you with my pieces of advice ;)
GMAT Club Bot
740 (Q50, V40, AWA 4.5, IR3) - anti-debrief ;) [#permalink]
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