Timing Strategies on the GMATGeneral Timing Strategies:Few of the questions given on the GMAT are actually hard. What makes the test hard to solve, is that you have less than 2 minutes per question and you rush, making careless, attention, calculation, and other mistakes. Thus one of the keys to the high score is anticipating and eliminating these mistakes. You can give yourself an advantage by preparing and saving/spending time where appropriate. Here are the fundamental rules:
- Time yourself whenever you solve any questions. Whether you are solving 10 or just 1 question, make sure you are familiar with the ticking of the clock and pressure that it puts on you. Use:
- If you are making many careless mistakes, try this this trick: Pause after reading a question. esp. on the quant section, after reading a question and before starting to solve it - stop for 5 seconds and instead of throwing yourself at it, take a casual look at it and think if an easier solution exists. Don't just rely on your reflexes, use your brain too. While it sounds counter-productive, this trick will help you save time and also avoid some silly mistakes you may make by rushing to read the question.
- If possible, avoid guessing 2 questions in a row. If pressed for time - solve every other question instead of guessing the last 3. You can see what happens if you get multiple questions in a row wrong here: GMAT GMAT Prep Analysis
- Most Important Tip: Never ever ever spend more than 3 minutes on a single question. After 3 minutes, if you still can't see a solution, figure out an alternative approach, or start a guessing strategy. Be done by 3:10 OR it will hurt for the rest of the test. Plan and know your limits and promise yourself you will do it. This again sounds counter-productive but it will help you. It is possible to miss 9 Quant questions and still get a Q49 for example. It will hardly make a difference if you guess one.
- You need to be prepared that the timing will not go as you wish or plan. Battle plan rarely survives contact with the test: you may get a hard start or a few questions in a row that will get you down, but you need to be flexible and adjust to the test, just as the test tries to adjust to you. Plan to be stuck. Plan to be freaked out. Plan to panic. I don't mean plan to have a mental breakdown and practice rolling on the floor - I mean plan for all of these situations/scenarios and how you will respond in each. Know when it is time to move on. Prepare to face the expected.
- If you have problems with timing - experiment during practice tests! For example, you can take a test on which if you don't answer a question within 2 minutes, you simply move on. I took one like that, and what I did was guess when I was overtime on hard questions. My results that day, perhaps, were the lowest of all, but it allowed me to finish early and measure the time I had left as an "extra" time for hard questions. Another test you can take is "untimed" (some software simulators allow it) and take the time I needed on every question - this showed how much time i comfortably needed.
- Don't spend your time looking at the clock or turning it on and off - instead check the clock 3 times only during each Quant and Verbal section - this will save you at least 30 seconds that you were going to use up and also a lot of worrying about not finishing on time. Divide the test into three sections (see image below for what I would have done - notice that i am optimizing and planning to spend a bit more time for questions 9-15 - these tend to be the hardest and you will likely need more time; I am also keeping numbers simple and round and easy to remember). You may have a different flow you are comfortable with - try it out. Hopefully this will give you an idea how you are doing without causing you to worry every time you look at the clock.
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- Finally, an obvious one - do not leave questions unanswered. Each unanswered question drops your score by 3 percentile points as confirmed by GMAC. Note that GMAC has changed their rules a few years ago and now any question that has not been submitted (e.g. the last one) even if it had an answer chosen, will count as unanswered.
Quant Timing Strategies - Know by heart the common percent values, square roots, powers, and fractions. This will allow you to save time on calculations - see this post for details: https://gmatclub.com/forum/what-arithme ... 80128.html
- If you encounter a hard question that you are not sure how to solve - be happy - you must be doing really well and on the right track. Celebrate and don't freak out. Take a pause and think of an un-usual/backsolving/etc solution to it.
- After reading the question, it may help to review the answer choices with the following thoughts in mind: how far apart is the distribution (how precise the calculations need to be), potential tricks with answers such as \(\frac{1}{2}\) or \(\frac{-1}{2}\).
- In quant it is fairly easy to remember/get familiar with Question Patterns. Some people are better at this than others, but you will notice that most questions have a pretty set pattern; knowing these will help you save time when solving them and thus most likely will increase your score. This is unfortunately only true about medium and easy questions. The hard GMAT questions tend to be fairly unique. My suggestion is that you know how to solve every question in the OG (not just remember the answer but actually know how to solve a similar question). If you have trouble with this, memorize a typical question and a solution. You can later recreate it and plug your new question into that format without wrecking your mind (true for probability and group questions for me at least).
- Write intermediary calculations. I am slightly dyslexic and many other folks are it seems as well - if you have that issue, spend extra 3 secs writing your calculations down; see if that helps improve your accuracy at the cost of a few seconds. Don't do it in the head (that eliminated half of my careless errors)
- Math Revolution claims to have a very effective and non-orthodox approach to quant questions and timing, follow their experts on the forum to learn it or checkout their videos/course offering
Quant Question Approach in Short:
1. Read through the question (take 5 seconds to look at it and the answer choices)
2. See if you can apply any of the time saving techniques or quicker solutions or a trap!
3. Optional: Read the setup again and write out all the info you will need to answer the question (this helped me)
4. Do not miss an important detail in the beginning of the question - this is a common catch in both Math and CR's
5. If you are too stressed about time, and the test’s got you on the run, take away your eyes from the screen and try focusing them on your hands or the seam of your pants to regain your confidence
6. Know how to solve every math question type (arithmetic, probability, word problems, etc)
7. Before you go to the test center - take several full length tests with IR and AWA. Know your limits - be realistic. Know how much you can spend on each question
Verbal Timing Strategies on the GMATYou will need to define your own timing strategy on the verbal section since your timing on each of the questions types will depend on your proficiency, reading speed, grammar skills, etc.
- Draw a grid on the scratch paper (A | B | C | D | E) for 5-10 questions and use it with hard verbal questions. (Make sure you do this during your break time or when the clock is not ticking). Then on the test, as soon as you eliminated an answer choice (for whatever reason, mark it on the piece of paper - esp helpful by the end of the verbal section when the brain can no longer function).
- For SC, create a check-list of grammar topics that you most often fall for. For instance, if you have trouble with modifiers, run-on sentences, and plurals, make sure those are on top of your check-list to run through when you cannot identify a problem with SC (i.e. when A is the correct answer). Here is more details about options to create such list: https://gmatclub.com/forum/distribution ... 85636.html or here: https://gmatclub.com/forum/sc-strategie ... 07121.html. What i recommend is that you create an acronym or some other method that you can run each SC question through your checklist for errors. Write this acronym down on scratch paper pad so you do not have to rely on memory (do it during the break)
- RC makes the table above with suggested timings a bit tricky since question #15 may be the first of a 4-question RC. With Verbal, you really have to watch your timing and know how much you can afford to spend on each question type. I have spent about 1 min on SC, 1.5 mins on CR, and the rest of the time I spent on RC - that was my approach. I could not speed up my RC's but I could speed up SC's and many CR's and that has given an opportunity for some extra time on RC. Unfortunately with the April 2018 change in the GMAT, there are still as many passages and RC questions as before but fewer CR and SC's, which makes getting a high verbal score harder and leaves even less time for RC. My recommendation for you is to approach Verbal portion of the test holistically.
- Get a handle on Scope, Assumptions, Inference, Conclusions. If you can master these, you will be able to save at least 5 minutes on the GMAT, and probably pick up as many as 5 points in your verbal score. Many answer choices are based on within/outside of scope - that's true for CR's and RC's. The same applies to assumptions, inference, and conclusions - many of the CR and RC questions are using these basic step stops to build questions and traps. If you can be flawless with these, you will be much better off. You the OG/Official questions to train your SCOPE ear.
- Remember that the most time efficient strategy to approach questions is outlined in the guidebooks (Kaplan Verbal Workbook, MGMAT CR, MGMAT SC, MGMAT RC, Veritas Prep Guides and PowerScore CR) - the basic strategies are all pretty similar in these guidebooks - FOLLOW them by the book, and by ever line. If the strategy says you need to re-read the question, that's what you do, and if it says you must read the question first - that's what you do as well. I see people making this mistake all the time - they try to cut corners and beat the system only to get mediocre inconsistent results
- The best strategies for me were:
- CR - read the question first and mark on a piece of paper the type of question (W for weaken, S for strengthen, A for assumption, etc)
- CR - after reading the passage - read the question again and answer it WITHOUT reading answer choices - BEST TIP EVER (if I had to pick one). After that, you only have to find it in the list - very quick and efficient. Learn how to do this.
- SC - the fastest strategy is to pick an error just from reading (without having to go through answer choices) then again, you are just picking from a list - faster than analyzing each answer choice (though possible only on easy and mid-level questions)
- RC - paraphrase each paragraph, take notes as you go - helps to remember the text and not go back
- RC - spend more time reading the first and last sentence of each paragraph and ask yourself - why was this sentence/paragraph placed here? What is author driving with it? Are you seeing any logical issues/flaws with it?
- RC - don't go back to the text (if you have read it carefully - you will not have to) - fastest and most reliable way through RC
- I find reading a few thousand pages a good way to prepare to and save time on the verbal section:
- You read faster - helps with every section
- Better digest large volume of text - helps with RC
- Your ear is trained better - helps with finding errors in SC's
- You're a less boring person to talk to :wink:
- Don't waste too much time on Idioms as they are not emphasized in the GMAT any more, but know the common ones that will help you understand text better
- If you are an international student, it is a good idea to know every word that you meet in the question text. Write them in a notebook - word, and definition with an example of how you encountered it. It takes time, but by the time you're done with one word, you will remember it
Verbal Question Approach in Short:
Sentence Correction (SC)My personal strategy was to spend 45 seconds on SC's (read question once, identify the problem, phrase it in my mind, and find the correct answer that matched the one I made up). Usually I could hit these in 30-45 seconds and in 20% of cases needed as much as a minute and a half to identify the correct one (this was esp true when A was the correct choice and I could not spot an error).
Critical Reasoning (CR)I spent 1:30 on each CR question. I could crack half of them in 30-45 seconds but the other half took closer to 2 minutes, so it was averaging about 1:30.
I found the approach of answering CR's in my mind before reading answer choices has significantly improved my accuracy and timing on easy and medium difficulty questions. It did not work as well on hard ones but I liked this strategy. GMATNinja does not appear to be a fan of it but it worked great for me.
Reading Comprehension (RC)All of this was building up towards the section I had the most problems with - reading comprehension. I knew that I needed 0:45 x 15 for SC's, 1:30 x 14 for CR's and that left 40 minutes for RC, which meant I could spend 10 minutes per passage. I would read the passage very carefully and spend probably 5-6 minutes doing and not feeling rushed as I knew I could read any passage in that period of time. After finishing the text, I knew I had 1 minute for each question so I did not need to rush either. On the Verbal, I did not really keep track of the clock when moving from question to question, but I would note the time when I start the RC passage and made sure I did not go over the 10 min interval by the end.
Timing YouTube Videos:Good Luck to you on the GMAT!
This thread is a revision of a previous thread that I have
earlier posted on timing strategies.
Another good resource is a series of posts by
Veritas Prep on the GMAT TimingAttachment:
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