by StaceyKoprince Tue Aug 28, 2007 10:39 pm
Hey, guys, I've been on vacation, sorry. Let's see, lots of stuff
- My students do generally feel that our quant is harder than the official test quant - you don't get little "mental breaks" on our test due to experimental questions, and also some of our questions are a bit more computation intensive than they should be (we're weeding these out as our algorithm data identifies problems).
- Having said that, we still do a pretty good job of predicting official test scores. Our standard deviation is 50 points, compared to a 30 point standard deviation for the official test. GMATPrep's SD hasn't been published, but I think of it as 40 points (worse than the official test, of course, but probably better than ours, or any other commercial company's, SD).
- Both OG and GMATPrep have a dearth of questions at the highest level. While the GMATPrep algorithm is the same as the official test's, GMATPrep's question pool is much more shallow - there just literally aren't as many very high level questions for the test to give you. My students who score at the highest math levels generally tell me that GMATPrep was easier than the real thing.
- For verbal, if you're not at the score you want, then you're not done studying OG, even if you've already done the questions. Your improvement doesn't come so much from doing the questions - it comes from analyzing the questions after you've done them. Start with understanding why the wrong answers are wrong - ALL 4 wrong answers on every verbal question. Don't stop until you feel like you could articulate to someone else why the wrong answers are wrong, well enough to convince the other person. Verbal is all about POE (process of elimination); most of the time, you get to the right answer by finding the four wrong answers first.
Also ask yourself why you got the question wrong - whether a technical error (that is, a grammar rule you didn't know or spot), a comprehension error (which might result from the passage / argument), or a "trap" error (you fell into a trap by picking a tempting but wrong answer - why were you tempted? and why is it really wrong?). Then figure out what you can do to avoid such errors in the future.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep