bip6420 wrote:
Hello guys,
I am very frustrated. I am not sure if there is anyone who could help me. I have taken the GMAT three times and the highest I've gotten is 350. I have been studying off and on since last October. I've read all of the
Manhattan gmat books and Princeton books. When I took the Manhattan CAT exams my scores were between 520-540. I usually get Q32 and V24. Alos, I took two of the exams in GMAT Prep and the highest score was 480. I am not sure what is wrong with me. I go to the test center and I am so scared and I panic. For some reason, I feel that I should know all of the answers to do well on this test. So, I need your help. I am planning to take the exam again, but I am not sure how to study. I don't need a 700 score, I need around 600 or high 500. I believe my strengths are reading comprehension, but I always run out of time. I know I need to study more of the sentence correction rules. I just need help on how to study. I am a very visual person. I don't know if I should go back and study every thing. I have read all of the books. If you were me, where would you start? Also, how did you study? Do you got to the book try to understand the topic then the
OG questions? I thought I was doing that, but in the real GMAT it seems that the questions are always need and have new topics. That's when I freak out. I need your help on how to study. I've read the study plan in GMAT club, but I am not sure if that helps me. I am not really sure where to start. How many hours should I dedicate a day? Please help me. I have all the
Manhattan books, the
Kaplan foundations for math and verbal and the
OG with the extra review books. What I am I doing wrong?
Judging from the limited information, I would guess that your basics are not in place. When you follow a process to solve a question, do you understand why you are following it? Do you understand the answer explanations of questions you are unable to answer on your own? If not, then you might want to revise the basic mathematical concepts from your high school book or websites e.g. purplemath.com, khanacademy.org etc. Many people who get 500-550 have some basic deficiencies. Try to figure out if you have some and rectify them in case you do.
Thereafter, focus on GMAT specific material. It will make far more sense to you once you understand the basics well. Also, after going through the basics, you can consider joining a course. That will give you the required motivation to be regular and study hard. Also, a teacher adds a lot of value at the 500-550 level.
_________________
Karishma
Veritas Prep GMAT Instructor
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