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GShine
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GShine
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Thanks to both of you!

The large increase in my Verbal score in my last attempt was mainly due to keeping my composure. I always had very high Verbal scores in my mocks but because of increased stress during the actual test, fatigue set in halfway through the Verbal section in my earlier attempts.

Over the course of my studies I took a ton of mock tests and had pretty much used up all good resources by the end of my second attempt. Here are my mock scores from the last attempt. I had a couple of repeated questions on each of these tests though:

MGMAT CAT 1, 670 Q43/V38 (without any practice)
GMAT Prep 1 (1st), 770 Q49/V48
GMAT Prep 2 (1st), 770 Q50/V46
GMAT Prep 1 (2nd), 760 Q49/V45
GMAT Prep 2 (2nd), 770 Q50/V45

I also took quite a few GMAT Club Quant tests.
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great improvement. congratulations!
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GShine

3. Time Management (25%)
4. Coping with Anxiety (25%)[/b]

Every individual is different, some people might not have any trouble with anxiety and others might feel the need to put more emphasis on theory and concepts. Nevertheless, I would advise anyone to keep these four aspects in mind throughout his/her preparation and fine-tune whenever needed.

Hey GShine, can't agree more about the importance of Time and Anxiety management ,both of these aspects are usually neglected by most test takers. I struggled with the Timing aspect myself and have been able to considerably improve my mock scores by just avoiding the temptation to spend extra time on questions in order to get them ALL correct. Most of us who do well during practice mocks but fail to replicate that on test day have Timing and/or Anxiety issues and this explains the big drop in the score on the Gday.Great you pointed it out. Congrats of the great score and good luck with the applications.
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dentobizz
GShine

3. Time Management (25%)
4. Coping with Anxiety (25%)[/b]

Every individual is different, some people might not have any trouble with anxiety and others might feel the need to put more emphasis on theory and concepts. Nevertheless, I would advise anyone to keep these four aspects in mind throughout his/her preparation and fine-tune whenever needed.

Hey GShine, can't agree more about the importance of Time and Anxiety management ,both of these aspects are usually neglected by most test takers. I struggled with the Timing aspect myself and have been able to considerably improve my mock scores by just avoiding the temptation to spend extra time on questions in order to get them ALL correct. Most of us who do well during practice mocks but fail to replicate that on test day have Timing and/or Anxiety issues and this explains the big drop in the score on the Gday.Great you pointed it out. Congrats of the great score and good luck with the applications.

I have almost the same story (2009,2010 and 2011 finally). I would like to add here that it is equally important not to be ahead of the time on the test as it is to be behind the time on the test. If you finish the sections say 10 minutes earlier you loose points as well because you end up making some careless mistakes. So it is extremely important to finish each section (Q,V) with 2 to 3 minutes remaining. Not more than that.
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So finally, one and a half years after my GMAT debrief, my B-School application journey has ended with an acceptance to the Class of 2017 of Columbia Business School - my top choice.
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GShine
I was always more inspired by people who first got beat by the GMAT but who then worked relentlessly until they reached their goal.
How true! I am a part of a coaching establishment, and can vouch that over the years, the most humbling experience for us is when a person, who got beaten by GMAT in the first attempt(s) does not given up, and ultimately tames it!

I have always maintained that there is absolutely no shame in trying and not succeeding; it takes a lot of guts to persevere, and prevail.

Congratulations on your admit too. God Bless.
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