yowtheman wrote:
Hello!
Last friday I took the Official GMAT and scored 610 (Q46 V28), a bit disappointing since I've been scoring around 650-670 on my mocks (V33-V36). I'm aiming to a score +700 so I'm planning to retake the GMAT and I wonder if I could get some advices and tips about the retake strategy.
Thanks for the help!
P.S: I tried to add my ESR but I'm not allowed yet because I've made less than 5 posts.
Hi yowtheman,
Sorry to hear about your experience with GMAT. Let me help you.
This article may be helpful in analysing what went wrong with your actual attempt when you score higher on mocks:
https://blog.gmatwhiz.com/scored-low-on-gmat/Looking at your Official score break up, you are good with concepts in Quant but need to work on the application of concepts. And in case of verbal, you are surely not on the right path. Your verbal score clearly indicates there are many conceptual gaps and you may need to start from scratch, revisit the concepts and get a clear understanding of them before you solve the questions.
What needs to be done for Quant?
For Quant, identifying your weaker areas and working your weaker areas should ideally get you a score of 49/50. You have to work a little more on the application of concepts while solving the Quant Questions. You should consider spending more time on analysing the solutions of the questions from the topics in which you are weak. By analysing I mean, go through each step of the solution, identify the exact step at which you made the mistake, compare your approach with the right one and then learn the right approach. This should help.
If you are struggling with some specific topics, you may share the same for better understanding.
How to Ace your Verbal Prep?
For GMAT Verbal, it is very important that you follow the right methodology and the logical approach. Your focus has to be on
eliminating four incorrect choices rather than choosing the right one. The key is to develop a solid understanding of the concepts that are typically tested on the GMAT and master the process skills that are required to solve GMAT questions. Only then, you will be able to smartly avoid the traps set by the test makers.
Before you start learning, it's important to understand what is actually tested using the questions. Each module in Verbal (SC, CR and RC) has to be approached in a different way. For example, before you start learning the concepts of SC, you need to understand that SC questions on GMAT test your ability to convey the right meaning without any ambiguity. So, it's important to approach them from a meaning stand-point. You might have often come across answer choices which are both grammatically correct and convey a logical meaning but are indeed incorrect because they do not convey the intended meaning. So, the process to approach SC questions is to:
• Comprehend the original meaning of the sentence
• Identify errors if any (both grammatical and meaning wise)
• Eliminate answer choices which either are grammatically incorrect or do not convey the intended meaning
I’d recommend you to follow this order for the verbal part - SC->CR-RC. The reason for this is very specific. Each question type on the GMAT is testing a specific skill. SC tests your comprehension skills. CR tests comprehension & analytical skills. Finally, RC builds on the previous two skills and also tests your ability to be able to grasp the central point of the passage i.e. Your inferential skills. Thus, when you learn in this order, it's much more effective.
Hope this helped and feel free to contact if you have any further queries.
Having said that, I would need some more details to help you with a retake strategy:
1. The time you have devoted to your prep
2. Resources you used for prep
3. The structure and study plan you followed
4. The mocks you have taken along with Scores
5. When do you intend to go for retake
You can always write back to me here or the better way would be to connect over a call and have a discussion. You can schedule a free consultation call using the below link.
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