studyprep282
Hi Experts,
I have been solving question from GMATClub and trying to do analytics in Excel.
But this is turning counter productive as it is consuming a lot of time.
My exam is approaching and I need to make this process easy and quick.
I plan to leverage the
E-GMAT Scholaranium platform and question bank.
Primary reason - Awesome analytics, structured question bank with detailed and concise solution.
What is your view about the question quality of E-GMAT?
Feedback I have -
Verbal - Question quality is 7/10. CR and RC strategy isnt the most effective so going through pre-thinking based solutions wont add a lot of value unless one is using the pre thinking approach. ( I do not pre think)
Quant- The questions are calculation intensive and not GMAT like. 4/10.
Thanks in advance!
Hello,
studyprep282. I think that the more responses you receive, the more you will see they have in common. I have not personally gone through the
e-GMAT curriculum and have only occasionally come across its questions in the forum, so I do not feel as though I can give an informed response on the matter. Moreover, I am not in the habit of openly criticizing any company or its products, unless I see questions that have been plagiarized from official material.
I have said in earlier posts that no one preparation method will appeal to everybody, regardless of how effective a certain platform may prove to be for one person, one hundred people, or ten thousand people. I stand by that statement. If you choose to move forward with
e-GMAT, my advice is to pour everything you have into the effort: practice the methods you are taught, rather than thinking to do things your own way.
One aspect of the
e-GMAT platform that I have praised since its unveiling is the Last Mile Program. If you can earn a competitive score at or above a certain threshold, you gain access to a private tutor who will help guide you further. Such a perk appears to be unique to
e-GMAT, and I like the personal touch.
Good luck, whatever you decide to do. Thank you for thinking to ask for my input.
- Andrew