DaenerysTargaryen
Hi
AndrewN -- hope all is well. I've come for solace, hoping for your continued generosity. I am still working through
Target Test Prep. They recently changed their analytics page and it now shows how much time I've spent on the platform - 340 hours. It feels pathetic to have spent so much time only to get through ~2.8k practice and "example" quant problems. I'm nowhere near being able to actually execute the problems in ~2 minutes. I just took an Overlapping sets "hard" difficulty level test and got a 55% after only getting one wrong across all the easy and medium questions. Of course, the target is 60% or higher for that difficulty level, but it's just a huge time investment to still feel stupid. This event incited my post.
I started some of the new "pre-launch" Verbal questions and I find them to be unusually difficult compared to the official Verbal practice questions. I had hoped this meant that perhaps the easy/medium/hard difficulty levels assigned in the Quant section are harder than they are labeled, but
ScottTargetTestPrep said in a post he wrote that they are, unfortunately for me, not.
I feel like pushing through the last 700 questions or so of the
TTP Quant course and then focusing on Verbal + one daily
TTP-generated practice quant test to focus on weak areas. Any thoughts on that approach? I'm not sure of the best platform to use for Verbal. I have access to
TTP ("pre-launch" Verbal does not yet have Reading Comprehension), Veritas Prep and The Economist when I panic-purchased several courses in a short period, very unbecoming of the Mother of Dragons, at a time when I thought I was applying to my program in January, but I now have the luxury of another 4 months until I need to take it.
Would love your thoughts, as always!
-DT
Hello, DT. I am sorry to hear that your frustration continues. It is good to see, however, that your performance on Easy and Medium questions is level with where you need/want to be. Your plan sounds rooted in disappointment and anxiety, to be honest. Do you have to go through 700 questions to complete your training for the GMAT™? Of course not. Sometimes letting go is not the right choice for ease... I have worked with two clients recently who have expressed similar frustrations with the platform. Does that mean it is not worthwhile? No. It just might not be the best tool for
you at this point. If someone had paid me for 340 hours of tutoring, you had better believe that person would feel more comfortable with anything the test might throw at them than you appear to be. I am not knocking
TTP as a learning tool, and neither do I doubt its effectiveness, given the ranks of positive reviewers on this site and elsewhere. However, the thoroughness of the platform may work against it for some students, and if you think that getting through the rest of the course will automatically make you test-ready, then you have another thing coming.
If you have purchased access to other online learning modules, then you should explore them further to see what may resonate with you in Verbal. My guess is that
TTP will prove to be more of the same: exercise after exercise designed to whip you into shape. But maybe you need a nudge in the right direction, a tip ahead of time, without working through questions, and either Veritas Prep or The Economist could provide such guidance. (I am unfamiliar with exactly what you get with access to any of these platforms, but I have read good things.) Verbal is also different from Quant in that there are fewer rules to cover and a lot more technique to discuss. You might find
this debrief to be of interest. This 770 scorer outlined how he spent very little money to end up where he did, and you know what? He credited two
free online resources as those that had helped him the most: GMAT Ninja videos on YouTube (for Verbal) and All You Need for Quant, a mega-thread posted in topic-by-topic format, by
Bunuel.
Keep an open mind. The job of any
TTP rep is to sell you on its products. (I would do the same if I had a 5-star product that had taken thousands of collaborative hours to develop.) But to each his... er,
her own. What may work for someone else may not work the same for you. This is true of
TTP, Veritas Prep, The Economist, a tutor, or any other resource. But you seem frustrated, and that has got to go before you make genuine progress in the next phase of your preparation.
I hope that helps, My Queen.
- Andrew