Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.
Customized for You
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Track Your Progress
every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance
Practice Pays
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Thank you for using the timer!
We noticed you are actually not timing your practice. Click the START button first next time you use the timer.
There are many benefits to timing your practice, including:
At one point, she believed GMAT wasn’t for her. After scoring 595, self-doubt crept in and she questioned her potential. But instead of quitting, she made the right strategic changes. The result? A remarkable comeback to 695. Check out how Saakshi did it.
The Target Test Prep course represents a quantum leap forward in GMAT preparation, a radical reinterpretation of the way that students should study. Try before you buy with a 5-day, full-access trial of the course for FREE!
Prefer video-based learning? The Target Test Prep OnDemand course is a one-of-a-kind video masterclass featuring 400 hours of lecture-style teaching by Scott Woodbury-Stewart, founder of Target Test Prep and one of the most accomplished GMAT instructors
So... You have almost finished your GMAT Prep. You are almost hitting your target score. But it's still 7-10 days to the test. Here is your chance to squeeze every point out of that V.
Maximise evaluation time
Take a practice CAT (Preferably GMAT Prep. If not, get something that you've used before.)
Simulate exact test conditions: This should include AWA, IR, breaks: exactly as you would on the test
Test Score within 30 points of your target score - Evaluate your mistakes. Check for patterns in the test review section to figure out whether there are multiple mistakes on the same concept (for example: Weakening in CR), and note down the questions and concepts tested on those questions. Later, export them to your error log.
Test Score with a difference of more than 30 points from your target score: You may want to reschedule depending on how much time you have left. Make sure you reschedule before 14 7 days to get the full credit. a refund
If you cannot take full length tests for some reason, you can always take timed drills with the same number of questions that you would have to in the GMAT
Reviewing Verbal Concepts
Sentence Correction
Take a question from your error log (Preferably an official question)
Time yourself and find out the right answer.
For every single incorrect answer choice, figure out what the precise reason for that option to be incorrect. Write the reason down. Do not settle with explanations such as "it is an awkward construction." If you cannot put your finger to the exact reason, you have not mastered sentence correction yet.
Look for similar questions using GMAT Club tags and use the same strategy. You should become more comfortable. Remember that at the end of your prep, it's all about quality over quantity. So do not be afraid to spend too much time analysing a question like the way mentioned.
Practice and Analyse for the following concepts: Modifiers, Parallelism, Subject Verb Agreement, and Meaning.
Critical Reasoning
Review from the last CAT to find out areas of development and pressure points.
For strengthening and weakening questions, ALWAYS find your own versions of the correct answer before looking at the option.
For assumption questions, try to find out a possible assumption. If you cannot, it's okay. Look at the options. If anything does not jump out, try the negation technique.
For inference and bold face questions, DO NOT put your common sense into an exercise. Rely solely on the premises of the argument and its structure.
Use these strategies to analyse questions in your pressure areas and note for increasing accuracy while maintaining the timing constraint.
Reading Comprehension
Reading Comprehension is a bit crucial when it comes to improvement, for if you do not comprehend a passage well you will end up making repeated mistakes, which we all know can be pretty detrimental with that Verbal score of yours. Make sure you follow a strategy that works for you and then go on a mission to solve official questions. Simplify the question set into specific sets such as main point/inference/detail and work on them. It is up to you whether you want to make notes, but make sure they are as brief as possible.
Instead of revising from different passages, try to make your revision question specific.
Bucket different passages using three basic question types: A. Main idea or Primary Purpose B. Details in the passage C. Inference.
Do not be afraid to read one entire passage for one question of each type. It will only add to your reading stamina.
For Main Idea or Primary Purpose questions, you are looking at the overarching idea of the passage. Do not overlook major hints in the first or the last or both paragraphs in the passage.
For detail questions, make sure you are not confused or deviated by intentional wordplay. Often a detail question answer choice which lifts a word or a phrase from the passage would be the wrong one.
For inference, let your common sense take a back seat. Analyse the argument structure to figure out what can be logically inferred AKA Must Be True.
Stamina is the Key - Timing is the Lock
Do not fall prey to the average time argument. For example there are 75 minutes to attempt 41 questions in the verbal section. So you have to attempt each question in less than 2 minutes to finish the test on time, right? Nope!! 2 minutes being the average. You may end up using more than 3 minutes in a difficult question (assuming that you are going somewhere and not struggling to comprehend the question and trying random things) and thus you need to be prepared to store some time.
Make sure to have a great endurance level in the test. The more exhausted you are, the more blurry the text will look like and the more time it will take for you to understand the question. Take one thing at a time and fool your mind to think that you were born to answer that Critical Reasoning question. Sentence Correction is your life purpose.
All the best for the GMAT!
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Where to now? Join ongoing discussions on thousands of quality questions in our Verbal Questions Forum
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block below for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.
I didn´t know that if you reschedule with 14 days or more, you get the full credit. Reading the mba.com website, I understood that if you reschedule with more than 7 calendar days of the test day, you have to pay only $50 (and not lose the full $250) https://www.mba.com/us/frequently-asked- ... tment.aspx
However, I wasn´t aware of the 14-day-or-more-policy.
I didn´t know that if you reschedule with 14 days or more, you get the full credit. Reading the mba.com website, I understood that if you reschedule with more than 7 calendar days of the test day, you have to pay only $50 (and not lose the full $250) https://www.mba.com/us/frequently-asked- ... tment.aspx
However, I wasn´t aware of the 14-day-or-more-policy.
Can you confirm this?
Thanks!
Show more
Hi! Thanks so much for the info! I corrected it. 14 day refund was the old system which got discontinued I think.
A member just gave Kudos to this thread, showing it’s still useful. I’ve bumped it to the top so more people can benefit. Feel free to add your own questions or solutions.