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jp001
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Dear Joe,

Thank you for you detailed response. :-)

First and foremost, my recommendation to you is: READ. Read an hour a day, over and above any GMAT preparations. You are planning to go to business school, the the best thing you can do for your preparation would be to read the Wall Street Journal every day and the Economist magazine every week. Not only will this improve all of your verbal skills, but also it would give you invaluable information for your essay, your interview, and your time in B-school.

Here's another perspective on RC:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/curiosity- ... n-success/

I would say, from this point forward, whatever verbal questions you practice, always read the text explanation or watch the video explanation, regardless of whether you get it right or wrong. Be eager to verify that you understand what you think you understand, and always look for further elements beyond what you initial understood. It always limits a student to be too eager to jump to the place of "I understand! I'm done!"

You wrote: "Here I have a interesting question. WHY I COULD GET GOOD SCORES IN MY MOCKUPS BUT NOT IN MY REAL EXAM. IS IT BECAUSE OF LACK OF CONCEPT OR SOMETHING ELSE?"
This can be the issue of stress and anxiety. No matter how realistic you make the practice sessions, something in simply knows, "This is not for real" --- if you have a bad day in your private practice, nobody knows about it, and it doesn't cost any money. By contrast, the real GMAT is "for real" --- at every level, you know that this one matters in a way that the practices do not. I would say you need to work on stress management.
Here's a series of articles you may find helpful.
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/overcome-g ... y-breathe/
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/beating-gmat-stress/
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/the-gmat-b ... g-picture/
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2012/overcome-g ... y-breathe/
Practice all those recommendations for five months, and you will see definite changes in your ability to handle high-pressure situations.

Perhaps the most tricky thing is know what questions to practice at this point. I would say use the Magoosh questions, but you have already been through those twice, and it sounds like you have already been through all the MGMAT questions and the OG. Have you also gone through all the question in the OG Verbal Review? Most of the Veritas questions I have seen are very good: you may try them. It never hurts to go back to each and every Verbal question in the OG and make sure you understand everything happening in the question. Again, it's very easy to see one reason that, say, (B) is correct and (D) is wrong and stop there; a thorough student wants to understand every reason why the right answer is right and why each wrong answer is wrong. Start to look for patterns among wrong answers.

I would also recommend: read through every single Verbal article on the Magoosh free blog:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/category/verbal/
The questions in the earlier blogs would be the same as questions in the current product, but the newer blogs have new questions that haven't been entered into the Magoosh product yet.

Finally, here's an important perspective on getting a good GMAT score:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2014/getting-a-good-gmat-score/
If you walk into your GMAT thinking about verbal strategies, that could help you get a high score. If you walk into the GMAT with the focus, "I need to get a 600", that almost guarantees that you will fail. Thinking about the score, focusing on it, fixating on it, actually prevents you from achieving it. This is a basic fact of mental/emotional health that many students fail to appreciate.

I hope all of this helps.
Mike :-)