I once got a 50 on an MBA.com practice test and missed 11 questions.
See the end of this link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZro7O3 ... H1V4AaABAgSo I did the above exercise twice, but the first time (I'm still mad at myself for this), I forgot to record. So I took the test, missed 11 questions, really struggled, and got the best score I'd ever gotten.
So I did a second recording. The test felt easier and I only missed three questions. But I got the same score.
This doesn't weird me out in the slightest. Many of the 11 that I missed on that first test were very hard. I hardly got punished for missing them. Basically, my punishment was, "Okay, well, we can't give you the perfect score of 51."
But how could I only miss three and get the same score? Well, the three I missed were the same difficulty as whatever difficulty I missed in the first test that got me the 50. Meaning: my ceiling is fixed by the difficulty of the easiest questions I missed. In the 11 and in the 3 I missed, there were questions of relative similarity (probably about three of them!) The 8 extra I missed in test 1 were very hard questions I didn't get that punished for missing.
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REED ARNOLDManhattan Prep GMAT InstructorVideo: The 24 Things Every GMAT Studier Needs to DoHow to Improve a GMAT ScoreThe Studying Verbal Starter Kit (...That's much more than a 'starter kit')The Studying Quant Starter Kit (...That's much more than a 'starter kit')The PERFECT data sufficiency question:On a three person bench, George sits in the middle of Alice and Darryl. If Alice is married, is an unmarried person sitting next to a married person?
1). George is married.
2). Darryl is not married.
Answer: