Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.
Customized for You
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Track Your Progress
every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance
Practice Pays
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Thank you for using the timer!
We noticed you are actually not timing your practice. Click the START button first next time you use the timer.
There are many benefits to timing your practice, including:
Do RC/MSR passages scare you? e-GMAT is conducting a masterclass to help you learn – Learn effective reading strategies Tackle difficult RC & MSR with confidence Excel in timed test environment
Prefer video-based learning? The Target Test Prep OnDemand course is a one-of-a-kind video masterclass featuring 400 hours of lecture-style teaching by Scott Woodbury-Stewart, founder of Target Test Prep and one of the most accomplished GMAT instructors.
I have recently taken GMAT and the result (770, Q50 V44) was not too shoddy. Since I used a lot of materials from this forum I think it's time I give something back.
I have attached the checklist that helped me a lot with SC. I spent quite a lot of time on the SC section and initially it was all to little or no avail. I started asking myself "why am I not learning from my mistakes" and I realised that the rules-and-concepts approach used by the OG and most books didn't really work for me and that I continued to "play it by the ear". I decided that I needed to focus on specific observable markers that I could relate directly to decision rules, thus avoiding the middleman of concepts. This approach made my analysis of mistakes much easier and more fruitful. Before I started collating this spreadsheet each mistake felt like "a special case"; this spreadsheet helped me see patterns in my mistakes - i.e. markers that I missed or decision rules that I ignored. The spreadsheet is very much work in progress and is by no means comprehensive; however you can tailor and expand it based on your own mistakes.
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Where to now? Join ongoing discussions on thousands of quality questions in our Verbal Questions Forum
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block below for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.
Thanks to another GMAT Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).
Want to see all other topics I dig out? Follow me (click follow button on profile). You will receive a summary of all topics I bump in your profile area as well as via email.
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Where to now? Join ongoing discussions on thousands of quality questions in our Verbal Questions Forum
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.