Friday, August 21, 2020
Blog Archive Manhattan GMAT Top 5 GMAT Test-Taking Strategies
Blog Archive Manhattan GMAT Top 5 GMAT Test-Taking Strategies While many are patiently waiting for results from this yearâs application cycle, a new wave of candidates are beginning to ponder the coming year. Of course, top of mind in terms of long term planning isâ¦. taking the GMAT! Our good friend Chris Ryan, Director of Instructor and Product Development at Manhattan GMAT, recently penned a series on GMAT test taking strategies which we will be publishing on our blog as each segment is released. Enjoy todayâs installment⦠Top 5 GMAT Test-Taking Strategies Youâve studied all the content, youâve done hundreds of problems, youâve taken practice test after practice test. And now, itâs GMAT game day. Youâre following all the logistics tips: you got enough sleep last night, youâve shown up early, you havenât eaten anything funny, you plan to take the breaks while giving yourself enough time to check back in with the proctors. But what about actually taking the test? What do you have to remember while youâre in the thick of battle? Here are five strategies to guide you. 1) Turn the page. Imagine youâve just clicked âC, Next, Confirmâ on a tough Data Sufficiency problem involving two overlapping triangles and lots of labeled angles. One of the statements was utterly baffling. You spent too much time deciding between C and E, and now you think you probably chose wrong, with your luck. Forget all that. You are facing a new problem. This is the only place your mind should be. Take out a âblank sheet of mental paperâ and dive in. Now, as you get into this new problem, a whisper in your head tells you that the problem is too easy, so you probably got the last problem wrong, and by the way â" youâre doing poorly overall. Turn that whisper off. You should not spend an instant of your time wondering about the past or about âhow youâre doing.â You truly have no idea how youâre doing â" and if you did know, it wouldnât help you anyway. The only opportunity you have to affect your fate is THIS problem. Forget about one minute ago. Focus on the here and now, and do the problem as best as you can. 2) Know when to fold âem. You are now embroiled in a different problem, and itâs a dogfight. This problem seduced you â" you thought you knew how to solve it, but the answer you got wasnât on the screen. Now youâre scrambling to recheck all your math, and you canât find any errors. Frustrated, you feel like simply choosing the answer choice thatâs in the same ballpark as the answer that you calculated. Now take a deep breath. And remember that to win this war, you have to lose some battles. Donât be a perfectionist. Remember that even people who get very high scores on the GMAT get a substantial proportion of questions wrong. Be ready to cut bait and walk away. âBut,â you think to yourself angrily, âIâve spent all this time, and now itâll all be wasted.â Well, maybe not. Step back and see if you can take an intelligent guess. Eliminate some answers if you can. Sometimes, by giving up on Plan A, you can spot Plan B â" which may not get you all the way to the right answer, but it might increase the odds. So you give this âPlan Bâ idea a try â" and it doesnât work this time. You donât see any other way to attack this evil problem. What do you do now? Tell yourself the problem is experimental â" and thatâs why itâs so cryptic! As many as a quarter of the questions are in fact experimental, and will not count towards your score. Of course, you shouldnât try to guess which ones, but if you find yourself at approximately the 2-minute mark with no way forward on a particularly dastardly problem, tell yourself that the problem probably doesnât even count. Then, take your shot and move on. Save your time to invest in problems you really know how to do. 3) Do your work on the scratch paper, not in your head. Now you get a problem involving odds and evens. The problem looks pretty straightforward, so you start thinking, âOkay, letâs see, x odd plus y even is odd, then I multiply that odd by this other odd and I get odd. Or I could have x be even, so then even plus even is even, then I multiply that even by odd and I getâ¦â Stop. You are setting yourself up for a fall. Your working memory can only hold a few items at a time â" under the best conditions. And studies have shown that under test pressure, the powers of your working memory shrink even further. Remember that other odds and evens problem you did in your head while you were sitting at your kitchen table with a plate of cookies? That problem wonât be so easy right now, here in the exam center. Write out your steps. Put the scenarios down on the scratch paper. Make the process as easy on your brain as possible. And be organized. Be a friend to your future self â" the self youâre going to be in thirty seconds, when youâre looking back over all these scribbles and trying to figure out what you just wrote down. 4) Check the time periodically â" but donât be clock-paranoid. Now youâre into another problem, and youâre worried youâre spending too much time. Your eyes dart to the clock every half a minute; you can just feel the seconds dropping away, like grains of sand through the neck of an hourglass. There go a few more. And a few more⦠Stop. Focus on the problem youâre doing. By checking the clock so often, youâre taking your mind off of solving the problem itself. Moreover, youâre liable to think youâre taking more time than you actually are. As a result, you may put in too little effort and bail out too quickly. Manage time by keeping to a rhythm, a kind of internal drumbeat. Then, every so often, check the clock and figure out if youâre ahead, behind or right on pace. You can use benchmarks (where should you be every 15 minutes?) or simply compare the time left to the number of problems remaining. You should have 2 minutes per math problem and approximately 1 minute 50 seconds per verbal problem (donât compute that precisely â" simply figure 2 minutes per problem, then take off about 10%). If youâre behind, adjust your drumbeat accordingly. Youâll need to shave seconds here and there. Donât try to make it all up in one fell swoop. 5) Take a moment to smile. Youâve got 10 minutes left and 7 math problems to do. Panic has set in. Youâre about to start randomly guessing, even though you know how to do this problem in front of you. And you canât help thinking that the whole exam has gone horribly wrong. Okay, this last prescription will seem extremely difficult at first. Apply the muscles of your face to your tightly pursed lips, causing the corners to arch upwards as you breathe in deeply through your nose. Now let the breath back out. Keep smiling, even if itâs forced. Emotion affects cognition, for good or for ill. If you panic, you canât think. And a direct way to change your emotional state is simply to fasten a brief smile on your face. Now get back into the fight. But stay positive â" itâs the best way to ensure that your performance measures up to your abilities. ***** The GMAT is like a tennis match at Wimbledon. And like a tennis pro, you should recognize that the game is not truly physical: itâs mental. Control your mind on the court, and your body will take care of itself. In a similar way, if you control your mind during the exam, using the strategies described above, your hard-earned GMAT skills will show up and take care of business. Good luck! Share ThisTweet Blogroll
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