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utkbits
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GMAT 1: 720 Q50 V38
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Hi utkbits, since you mention SC as your specific area of concern, thought I would mention that our sentence correction book Sentence Correction Nirvana is perhaps the only book that offers a score improvement guarantee, and is especially designed for non-native speakers.

After reading the book twice (yes! it's an academic book, and so must be read twice in all seriousness, to reinforce the concepts; hence I am definitely skeptical of any veritable improvement in 16 day time limit that you've set for yourself), you will start looking forward to solving SC questions!

The book is available on Flipkart and Amazon.in. You might want to refer to these sites, to also read testimonials of how readers have benefited.

See here how Mohit, who scored 750 on GMAT, vouches for our book.

If you want to sample a chapter before deciding to go ahead with our book, please PM me your mail-id (along with the chapter that you would like to sample) and I will be happy to send that chapter to you by mail. In addition, the entire Grammar section of the book is also available for free preview at pothi.
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I can feel the pain - multiple attempts but still not with a score that you are satisfied with.

Let me analyze your problem using a series of questions and answers.

1) Should you retake the GMAT with a 720?


If you are gunning for a top US program then yes it might make sense to have a last shot to get it to a 750+ score. Especially given it is just May and that you have another month or so before you hang up your boots and focus on the application bit.


2) What should I do now to get from 720 to 750+?

As this is your 6th attempt, you have perhaps mastered pretty much everything you need to in terms of concepts. So you need to dig deeper into the exact nature of the problem. You need to divvy up the problem into Quant and Verbal and try to deep dive into areas that are stopping you from hitting a Q50 and a V40.

The journey till a GMAT score of 700 is an improvement phase i.e. you will keep seeing improvement as you learn new stuff.

The journey to improve beyond GMAT 700 is an optimization phase i.e. your score increase will come from just 5-10% of the topics.

Here is a video I shot some time ago on this topic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyVmhFlliuo

3) What can I do differently in Quant this time?

You have been consistently scoring a Q49 - that tells me that you have everything to score 51 but are just not able to crack it.

Here are a couple of possible issues:

a) There are areas that you are not great at and you are just ignoring them. Think of inequalities in DS, think of coordinate geometry, think of Permutation, Combination.
If there are some weak areas then you are consistently getting a few questions wrong (at this level even a few easier questions can tilt the scale) that is not letting you hit the Q50 score.
Look at the official GMAT practice tests (any other test you are wasting your time - more on it later) you have taken I am sure with just a few repeats you would be hitting Q50 (with repeats it is a triple treat: you remember the answer, you save time, it boosts your confidence)

b) At Q 51 GMAT is expecting you to make some "leaps of faith" - this is when you get tested on some exception value or get tricked into misreading the question. We assume it was a silly mistake - it is NOT. You fell for a trap that GMAT set for you and unless you deep dive and analyze the mistakes - you are going to continue making them. Just go through all the questions you got wrong in the practice tests and try to analyze if there is any pattern here. I am sure even if you are able to get a few things in place it would help you get that extra point.

Here is a blog we wrote for people in your shoes: https://www.crackverbal.com/score-51-in-gmat-quant/

4) What can I do differently in Verbal this time?

You have hit a glass ceiling at V38 (that seems to be the typical score that most Indians end up getting). I have analyzed and found that there are a few things that could potentially be done differently:

a) You are good with your theory. grammar concepts else you would not have even reached this score so stop trying to go through theory. Focus only on the techniques you are using to solve questions.

b) For SC the chances are that you are falling for the exceptions. Remember that there are certain concepts that get tested only after a certain level so when you apply the same logic to a question at V45 that you would apply to a question at V35 you end up getting it wrong.

c) For CR there is a thin line between what external data you can bring into the argument - and what you cannot. To a large extent GMAT is testing you on your ability to understand the impact of some external information on the data at hand (strengthen, weaken, evaluate, paradox etc). Focus on how to eliminate the wrong answers with a good reason.

c) For RC you will realize that the passages are not going to get tougher - the answer options are going get super close. So it is important that you focus your energy not on understanding the passage but focusing on the way in which the answers are worded.

This is of course just an indicative list but I guess you got the drift.

5) What should I NOT be doing in this attempt?

This is a BIG mistake most people do - just start solving questions without paying attention to the source. Do not touch any unofficial material at this stage. No questions. No tests.

See GMAT is a highly calibrated test (with just 58 questions they are able to grade you a band from 200 to 800) so each question is designed very carefully. This means they spend a lot of time using very specific ways to test you. It costs GMAT around $2000 for every question they develop. However, most of the unofficial questions are written by a guy who knows math and gets paid about $10 per question. You have heard it - you get what you pay for.

As you solve official questions your brain starts building patterns so it can solve other questions that are similar. It is a complex neural process and don't even ask me how it works. If you have solved a Q51 problem on the GMAT you would have realized it is very elegant. However, most test prep companies (including some posters on GMATClub) end up making it tedious - the only way to solve it is by spending 3-4 minutes on the problem. So what happens is all the patterns that your brain is painstakingly building - gets destroyed. Butchered. Don't do it!

I like to give elaborate answers so others reading the post can also benefit from it.

Hope this helps :)

Arun
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Hi utkbits,

So I agree that a retake is a good idea; however as AjiteshArun mentioned, it’s likely going to take more than 16 days to improve to a 740+ GMAT score. Thus, you may consider giving yourself more time to prep and take your GMAT at a later date. In any case, here is some advice you can follow to improve your GMAT skills.

To improve your score to a higher level you should go through go through GMAT quant and (especially) verbal carefully to find your exact weaknesses, fill gaps in your knowledge, and strengthen your skills. The overall process will be to learn all about how to answer question types with which you currently aren't very comfortable and do dozens of practice questions category by category, basically driving up your score point by point. When you do dozens of questions of the same type one after the other, you learn just what it takes to get questions of that type correct consistently. If you aren't getting close to 90 percent of questions of a certain type correct, go back and seek to better understand how that type of question works, and then do more questions of that type until you get to around at least 90 percent accuracy in your training. If you get 100 percent of some sets correct, even better.

For example, let’s say you are reviewing Critical Reasoning. Be sure that you practice a large number of Critical Reasoning questions: Strengthen and Weaken the Argument, Resolve the Paradox, find the conclusion, must be true, etc. When you are working on learning to answer questions of a particular type, start off taking your time, and then seek to speed up as you get more comfortable answering questions of that type. As you go through the questions, do a thorough analysis of each question that you don't get correct. If you missed a weaken question, ask yourself why. Did you make a careless mistake? Did you not recognize what the question was asking? Did you skip over a key detail in an answer choice? Getting GMAT verbal questions right is a matter of what you know, what you see, and what you do. So, any time that you don't get one right, you can seek to identify what, if anything, you would have needed to know in order to get the right answer, what you had to see that you didn't see, and what you could have done differently to arrive at the correct answer. Follow this process for all verbal topics. I understand that you are looking to improve Critical Reasoning in particular, but to get to a 730, you will want to improve in all aspects of GMAT verbal.

When practicing Reading Comprehension, you need to develop a reading strategy that is both efficient and thorough. Reading too fast and not understanding what you have read are equally as harmful as reading too slow and using up too much time. When attacking Reading Comprehension passages, you must have one clear goal in mind: to understand the context of what you are reading. However, you must do so efficiently, so you need to avoid getting bogged down in the details of each paragraph and instead focus on understanding the main point of each paragraph. That being said, do not fall into the trap of thinking that you can just read the intro and the conclusion and thereby comprehend the main idea of a paragraph. As you read a paragraph, consider how the context of the paragraph relates to previous paragraphs, so you can continue developing your overall understanding of the passage. Furthermore, as you practice Reading Comprehension, focus on the exact types of Reading Comprehension questions with which you struggle: Find the Main Idea, Inference, Author’s Tone, etc. As with Critical Reasoning, analyze your incorrect Reading Comprehension answers to better determine why you tend to get a particular question type wrong, and then improve upon your weaknesses.

The process above can be perfected with a lot of practice. However, keep in mind that GMAT Reading Comprehension passages are not meant to be easy to read. So, to better prepare yourself to read such passages, begin reading magazines with similar content and style, such as the Economist, Scientific American, and Smithsonian.

Sentence Correction, on the other hand, is a bit of a different animal compared to Reading Comprehension and Critical Reasoning. There are three aspects to getting correct answers to GMAT Sentence Correction questions: what you know, such as grammar rules, what you see, such as violations of grammar rules and the logic of sentence structure, and what you do, such as carefully considering each answer choice in the context of the non-underlined portion of the sentence. To drive up your Sentence Correction score, you likely will have to work on all three of those aspects. Furthermore, the reason that your Sentence Correction performance has not improved is likely that you have not been working on all three of those aspects.

Regarding what you know, to be successful in Sentence Correction, first and foremost, you MUST know your grammar rules. Let's be clear, though: GMAT Sentence Correction is not just a test of knowledge of grammar rules. The reason for learning grammar rules is so that you can determine what sentences convey and whether sentences are well-constructed. In fact, in many cases, incorrect answers to Sentence Correction questions are grammatically flawless. Thus, often your task is to use your knowledge of grammar rules to determine which answer choice creates the most logical sentence meaning and structure. This determination of whether sentences are well-constructed and logical is the second aspect of finding correct answers to Sentence Correction questions, what you see. To develop this skill, you probably have to slow way down. You won't develop this skill by spending under two minutes per question. For a while, anyway, you have to spend time with each question, maybe even ten or fifteen minutes on one question sometimes, analyzing every answer choice until you see the details that you have to see in order to choose the correct answer.

As you go through the answer choices, consider the meaning conveyed by each version of the sentence. Does the meaning make sense? Even if you can tell what the version is SUPPOSED to convey, does the version really convey that meaning? Is there a verb to go with the subject? Do all pronouns in the sentence clearly refer to nouns in the sentence? By slowing way down and looking for these
details, you learn to see what you have to see in order to clearly understand which answer to a Sentence Correction question is correct.

There is only one correct answer to any Sentence Correction question, there are clear reasons why that choice is correct and the others are not, and those reasons are not that the correct version simply "sounds right." In fact, the correct version often sounds a little off at first. That correct answers may sound a little off is not surprising. If the correct answers were always the ones that sounded right, then most people most of the time would get Sentence Correction questions correct, without really knowing why the wrong answers were wrong and the correct answers were correct. So, you have to go beyond choosing what "sounds right" and learn to clearly see the logical reasons why one choice is better than all of the others.

As for the third aspect of getting Sentence Correction questions correct, what you do, the main thing that you have to do is be very careful.You have to make sure that you are truly considering the structures of sentences and the meanings conveyed rather than allowing yourself to be tricked into choosing trap answers that sound right but don't convey meanings that make sense. You also have to make sure that you put some real energy into finding the correct answers. Finding the correct answer to a Sentence Correction question may take bouncing from choice to choice repeatedly until you start to see the differences between the choices that make all choices wrong except for one. Often, when you first look at the choices in a Sentence Correction question, only one or two seem obviously incorrect. It may take time for you to see what you have to see. Getting the right answers takes a certain work ethic. You have to be determined to see the differences and to figure out the precise reasons that one choice is correct.

To improve what you do when you answer Sentence Correction questions, seek to become aware of how you are going about answering them. For instance, are you being careful and looking for logic and details, or are you quickly eliminating choices that sound a little off and then choosing the best of the rest? If you choose an incorrect answer, consider what you did that resulted in your arriving at that answer and what you could do differently in order to arrive at correct answers more consistently. Furthermore, see how many questions you can get correct in a row as you practice. If you break your streak by missing one, consider what you could have done differently that would have resulted in your extending your streak.

As with your Critical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension regimens, after learning a
particular Sentence Correction topic,engage in focused practice with 30 questions or more that involve that topic. As your Sentence Correction skills improve, you’ll then want to practice with SC questions that test you on skills from multiple Sentence Correction topics.

Although your quant is stronger, you can follow a similar process for that section. For example, if you are reviewing Number Properties, be sure that you practice 50 or more questions just from Number Properties: LCM, GCF, units digit patterns, divisibility, remainders, etc. When you are working on learning to answer questions of a particular type, start off taking your time, and then seek to speed up as you get more comfortable answering questions of that type.

As you do such practice, do a thorough analysis of each question that you don't get right. If you got a remainder question wrong, ask yourself why. Did you make a careless mistake? Did you not properly apply the remainder formula? Was there a concept you did not understand in the question? By carefully analyzing your mistakes, you will be able to efficiently fix your weaknesses and in turn improve your GMAT quant skills. Number Properties is just one example; follow this process for all quant topics.

Each time you strengthen your understanding of a topic and your skill in answering questions of a particular type, you increase your odds of hitting your score goal. You know that there are types of questions that you are happy to see and types that you would rather not see, and types of questions that you take a long time to answer correctly. Learn to more effectively answer the types of questions that you would rather not see, and make them into your favorite types. Learn to correctly answer in two minutes or less questions that you currently take five minutes to answer. By finding, say, a dozen weaker quant areas and turning them into strong areas, you will make great progress toward hitting your quant score goal. If a dozen areas turn out not to be enough, strengthen some more areas.

So, work on accuracy and generally finding correct answers, work on specific weaker areas one by one to make them strong areas, and when you take a practice GMAT or the real thing, take all the time per question available to do your absolute best to get right answers consistently. The GMAT is essentially a game of seeing how many right answers you can get in the time allotted. Approach the test with that conception in mind, and focus intently on the question in front of you with one goal in mind: getting a CORRECT answer.

In order to follow the path described above, you may need some new verbal and quant materials, so take a look at the GMAT Club reviews for the best quant and verbal courses.

You also may find my article with more information regarding
how to score a 700+ on the GMAT helpful.

Feel free to reach out with any further questions.

Good luck!
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