Hello all,
(Id like to apologize in advance for the length of
my first post, lol, but i greatly appreciate anyone who reads and would love any feedback or ideas.)
New to the forums. I absolutely love this website and the community of prospective b-school students like myself, i love reading the inspiring, enlightening, and informative experiences of all the posters on here. Ive been lurking through the forums for the past several weeks and am in the beginning of
my GMAT studies, and
my quest to 700+.
I dont plan on taking the exam until near the end of the year so im giving myself a lot of time to study. Im taking a manhattan in-class review course
starting in september, i decided on manhattan since many people on here swear by their books and i do well in a structured, in class setting as opposed to strictly on
my own. but i am studying on
my own now before hand so i have a better feel for the material once i begin the class, and know exactly what areas i need to improve on. I would like some feedback/suggestions/recommendations from some of the
GMAT veterans and others in their studies as well, and i will be more than happy to review any of the materials/methods i use as well as updating
my progress as i go. This is
my plan as of right now to get me to
my 700+ score.
I havent taken any full CATs yet, as i wanted to familiarize myself with the material before i take a diagnostic. The only thing i took was the diagnostic in the front of the OG12 and got "above average" on the math sections and "average" each of the verbal. So needless to say i dont know where i stand right now as far as a score, but i know that i am typically much stronger in math given
my engineering background and need to work more on
my verbal.
My plan is to review one week verbal, one week quant, and do some awa review when i have some extra time on the weekends. Is this one week on and switch method a good approah? id like to hear what some others think.
Note: I havent used the OG12 or OG math and verbal because i realized that manhattan references these books alot and didnt want to "use up"
1. Princeton review, cracking the
gmat. I wasnt going to get this book because of the reviews i read and many people saying that it wont get you to 700+ on its own . But I picked this book up because a friend of mine recommended it, and he scored 640 using just this and the OG11, so figured this book would serve as a good primer if nothing else since im just
starting out. Im so far halfway through the book, i finished the math section, it was really easy, but did give some good strategies for DS. I took the math
gmat warmup test untimed and got all of them right in a fairly timely fashion. I plan to complete the verbal section in the coming week and do the full paper test over next weekend.
2. Kaplan workbooks. Math and verbal.
Starting with math then verbal the following week
3. 1st diagnostic (either PR or Kaplan). Should give me an idea of where i am and what sections to work on.
4. From this point up until
my review course i plan on using various other resources, namely powerscore SC and CR, the
GMAT club tests, PR 1012, ultimate challenge sets, etc. then take
my manhattan diag at this point. not as set in stone as earlier, but i figure i will adjust
my plan as i go.
5. Manhattan review course (9/21-11/19). During this time ill mostly stick to their schedule and strengthen
my weaknesses as i go. I figure they will have me do the
mgmat practice tests during the class.
6. After the class, i hopefully will have identified
my weaknesses and spend most of
my time from here up until test day (december sometime) doing practice tests from gmatprep and doing the sets here at
gmat and ultimate challenge sets.
Hopefully this will take me up to test day and 5 or so months from now ill be staring at a 750 on the CAT screen, lol. Thanks to anyone who made it through
my lengthy (sorry again) post, and i would love any feedback/ideas anyone may have. I realize the difficulty of this exam and obtaining the score i want but i am all-in with this and will do whatever i have to to get it. So thanks again and i look forward to interacting with all of you and becoming involved in your
GMAT community.
Cheers,
John