Moderator Note: Moderator Edit: This does not appear to be a legitimate post; The user is blaming the course because it told her she will have to study to reach her goal longer than she expected. Not sure if the user purposefully used the name Karen to make this sound more dramatic or maybe it was intended as some kind of an odd joke?
Make sure you read the comments below from the community (the poster never came back to respond, unfortunately). Do you agree/disagree with KarenV? Feel free to post your comment here. If you are searching for reviews, you can find actual legit
reviews here As a full-time working adult, many years out from my undergrad degree, I knew I would need help to master new concepts and skills to pass the GMAT. After some online research, I resolved to study for 3 months, by steadily reviewing each day for 1 to 3 hours, completing approximately 150 to 180 hours of learning total. After completion of a practice test, I decided to initially focus on the Quant section. This is when I stumble upon
Target Test Prep. Based on what Quant score range you want, TTP constructs a personalized study plan. The higher the score range, the more modules, chapters, lessons, and practice problems revealed to you.
TTP’s collection of questions and practice tests are similar to those in the official guides and packs, however they are not specified as retired questions or tests. I’m not sure if their
home-made material is appropriate, but there is certainly an excess of it. I started the modules, following hyperlink after hyperlink, across chapters and lessons. To complete their proposed Quant study plan, they state you’ll need to
dedicate 180 hours for just this ONE section of the GMAT. Their proposed schedule was way in excess of the more often stated period of 150 hours to prepare for the entire GMAT. I would need to expand my study routine by hundreds of hours, resulting in a longer membership and spending lots more money, which I’m sure TTP likes but is an inconvenience for me. After several months of using the TTP course, I decided to step back to reassess.
Having lived and worked in the San Francisco Bay area for more than a decade, I was able to reach out to a possible mentor; a co-worker who completed his
MBA at Stanford! Upon hearing that the TTP study plan BEGAN with 180 hours just for the Quant section, he was astonished, declaring his first year of in-class time in the MBA program at Stanford took less hours to complete. I’m going to say that again:
the material he learned at this ivy league university took less time than TTP says I need to complete just their Quant modules. I was stunned and felt slightly deceived by TTP.
I signed up for TTP hoping to learn from GMAT specialists with superior insight, not just an organized collection of lessons and questions. This excessive timetable and increased expense shocked me early in the study process. Any increase in the time I need to set aside to study is time away from my spouse and children. I understand there is a time sacrifice needed to excel at the GMAT. Nevertheless, as a working adult with family responsibilities and limited time, I needed to pinpoint strategies for the GMAT. Expertise and techniques were promised but repetition learning was what TTP offered. In the end, I felt that I paid for an impractical study plan that I could recreate by working through questions and exams online at GMATClub for free.
Now I hear that TTP is doing Verbal. I assume that they’re going to make that really long and repetitive too so that their customers have to pay more and more and more.