Just Chillin’ @ the Bar
When under pressure, do you tend to sit back and assess the situation in a thoughtful way, or do you instead recall everything you know and start jotting down formulae such as W=RT on your scratch paper? If you have a tendency for the latter, this blog post is for you.
I’ve recently had a few tutoring students who all suffered from the same issue: they try a problem in a relaxed state and can easily solve it, sometimes without even putting pen to paper… But when they are in the midst of a practice test (and even more so in a real test) they can see the same problem and spend 4 minutes on it, with a lot of messy algebra, and often times they just give up and move on (the right thing to do under that circumstance!).
The Quant section of the GMAT may feel like a math test, but I assure you it is not. It is a cleverly designed assessment of your thinking faculties, and if you turn on ‘autopilot’ you are no longer thinking. In order to succeed on this test, you have to think your way through each problem.
When I take the GMAT, I imagine that I’m hanging out with my buddies at the bar – we’re telling each other jokes and sharing brain teasers. Here’s how it works: you’re all just out having a good time, there’s no pressure, maybe you’ve had a couple of drinks so you only try to solve those brain teasers that you think you can solve in 2-3 minutes or less. If the brain teaser seems too hard, you just give up (and no-one will think less of you!)
I suspect that your approach to the following problem would be completely different if your mindset is a ‘bar’ mindset vs. an ‘autopilot’ mindset:
I’m driving at a constant speed and it took me 4 hours to finish the first 1/3 of my trip. How long will it take me to complete the rest of the trip if I double my speed?
The Benefits Of Knowing Yourself
Invariably when I ask a student what about their strengths and weaknesses related to the GMAT, his list focuses on topics or question types.
- I struggle with the quant section.
- Sentence correction is my best verbal question type.
- I hate data sufficiency.
- I’m good at rate problems, but I can’t figure out probability.
- Etc.
Now, the ability to generate this sort of inventory is important. You should generally devote more study time to those topics and question types where you are weaker. But along with this topic-based inventory, other aspects of your personality and approach will impact your GMAT experience. Understanding these underlying tendencies in yourself can be invaluable to improving your GMAT performance.
In each of the four cases below consider which statement sounds more like you.
1) To solve a challenging problem
A. Give me a formula. Give me an algorithm. As long as I know an approach I can crank through the math and get the problem done.
B. I like the chance to get creative. Drawing diagrams and recognizing patterns is what I do best.