Hi
Manasi1223I'm not an expert, but I will guide you using my experience studying for the test...
verbal prep takes much more time than quant prep to show score improvement. give it at least another 2 months
Can you tell me your score break up in verbal for your GMATPREP CATs?, scaled score for SC, CR and RC ie
as per the new changes in GMAT, most questions appearing on the test will be from RC, followed by SC and then CR.
so having top notch RC skills is most imp, for RC please read this:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/experts-topi ... 41004.htmlalthough it's an article for beginners, it can suit people who are looking for score improvement...
understand each question type thoroughly..and have a strategy for each question type
4 things you should be focussing on:
internalise strategies - you should have a strategy for every question type in each category of verbal...
build endurance - do a set of 45 questions alternate days and time yourself for 75-80 minutes(max)
simulation of test - weekly you should be taking at least one gmatprep CAT and one unofficial(good for practice)...and on days you don't do the endurance activity i suggested above, you should at least do 25 questions on a timer...
target weak areas-find out your weakness in specific type of questions. one more important thing to know that put most of your energy, in questions that are most frequently tested on gmat and those that you are weak in...
PLEASE STICK TO OFFICIAL RESOURCES FOR VERBAL,
this I say, because it is important to develop a gmat ear, if you use other resources too frequently, you might not be able to familiarize yourself with the language used on gmat
if you run out you can use LSAT material for RC and CR..
there's plenty of official material on gmatclub and you can create your own practice sessions using these filters:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/search.php?view=search_tagsdon't solve gmat prep(gmac's software) questions on gmatclub, because then you'll familiarise yourself with those questions and might get an inflated score on gmatprep CATS. use official guide and verbal review.
you can create timed sets for CR + SC, by saving questions to PDF, you'll find that link next to each SC/CR question and you'll find the list here:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/ucp.php?i=wo ... _questionsin order to improve, it is of utmost importance that you know your weakness, you can do that best by reviewing your practice CATs
please read this on how to review CATS:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/how-to-revie ... 67118.htmlRC
check which kind(science, social science, business, humanities) of passages you make most errors or find difficult to comprehend
then check, which question type(primary purpose, inference, detail etc) you make most errors on
then relearn the concepts of those types and practice questions of those types, and review thoroughly...check expert answer explanations on gmatclub, do this on a regular basis
CR
same follows for CR check which type(assumption, weaken, evaluate, etc) of questions u are answering repeatedly incorrectly...
relearn concepts and practice in a timed setting, followed by thorough review
Same strategy for SC
You can relearn your concepts by checking the verbal resource here:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/verbal-guide ... urces-389/it is a compilation of the best verbal resources on gmatclub, see what works for you, try things, and stick to what works...join gmatclub chat on wednesday evening at 8pm with ur doubts, mostly there will be an expert who will help you with specific doubts...
As for Quant, gmatclub CATs are one of the best resources...and the interface is amazing, it logs your mistakes, it tells you which areas you're weak in...
and answer explanations are quite good...you can use it to target ur weak areas, but don't solve too many questions of a type...always do a mixed bag and for specific question you can always solve questions from gmatclub's abundance of material for specific topics:
here's how to best use the club tests:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/how-to-use-g ... 20802.htmlall the best...