GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Dec 2014
Status:GMAT Assassin/Co-Founder
Affiliations: EMPOWERgmat
Posts: 21850
Location: United States (CA)
Re: My GMAT journey from 580 to 630 will retake again
[#permalink]
08 Apr 2020, 19:13
Hi Pavan,
In another post, you asked for suggestions on good sources of advanced GMAT questions - and while it's understandable why you might be interested in a book of tougher prompts, with a V28, you would have lost significant points in ALL 3 major Verbal categories (RC, SC and CR) - so your immediate issues in the Verbal section are NOT about how you deal with 'advanced' questions. To earn a much higher score in the Verbal section (and thus, overall), you'll need to focus on learning the Tactics, patterns and little 'secrets' to the Verbal section - and all of that needs to come first (before you become overly concerned with how you're handling advanced versions of any of those question types.
Before I can offer you any additional advice for your studies, it would help if you could provide a bit more information on how you've been studying and your goals:
Studies:
1) On what dates did you take each of your Official GMATs?
2) How long have you studied in total? Over the last 3 months, many hours have you typically study each week?
3) What study materials have you used over the course of all of your studies?
4) On what dates did you take EACH of your CATs/mocks and how did you score on EACH (including the Quant and Verbal Scaled Scores for EACH)?
Goals:
5) What is your overall goal score?
6) When are you planning to apply to Business School and what Schools are you planning to apply to?
You might also choose to purchase the Enhanced Score Report for your most recent Official GMAT. While the ESR doesn’t provide a lot of information, there are usually a few data points that we can use to define what went wrong on Test Day (and what you should work on to score higher). If you purchase the ESR, then I'll be happy to analyze it for you.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich