helpme12345 wrote:
i know i can do way better it's just very time consuming to study the gmat and it's not like it's classroom work where you can kinda guess what's on the test... the gmat it's like well it could be on their or it might not.. it's ALOT of material
Not true...keep in mind that you're saying this as someone who admittedly never studied for the GMAT and never took a practice test. As such you're not really qualified to speak intelligently about the GMAT. A little bit of studying would yield substantial gains for you given that there's plenty of room for improvement on a Q13--your learning curve will be almost vertical for awhile.
There are actually a limited number of types of problems on the GMAT, and once you learn the basics they'll go a long way for you in terms of knowing how to solve most types of problems. On my GMAT I saw very few (if any) types of questions that I had never encountered before. The difficult part was recognizing the pattern in time to do the problem in around two minutes.
If improving a GMAT score wasn't very possible with a little concentrated effort, then Veritas,
MGMAT, Princeton Review, and plenty of other companies would have gone out of business a long time ago.