Study and Strategy questions relating to the GMAT.
SteveT639
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Scoring Percentiles & Schools

by SteveT639 Wed Apr 01, 2015 1:32 pm

So, I've been studying for ~2 months now and have really only studied the Quant (since finishing my 9-week MGMAT course). I consistently get ~40 in the Verbal, which puts me in the 90+%. My Quant has gone from 36 -> 44. But, I feel as if I've plateaued on my Quant.

So, I'm scoring between 680-700 on my practice tests. I'm ~3 weeks from my test date. Would it be to my benefit to really hone my Verbal and get >44 to make my overall test score look better (btw going for a 720+). Or will schools look at my lower-ish Quant score as an issue?

Percentiles don't factor into the 200-800 score, correct?

Let me know, thanks!
StaceyKoprince
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Re: Scoring Percentiles & Schools

by StaceyKoprince Thu Apr 09, 2015 8:03 pm

We don't specialize on the school / application side of things, but I'll give you my 2 cents. You may also want to ask an admissions consultant. :)

Most schools do look at both the overall score and the subscores. Once you get each subscore to an "acceptable" level, any overall improvement after that can come from either area.

Where do you want to apply? For most of the top-10 schools, a Q44 would be a bit on the low side, yes. From what I've heard, those schools are looking for a 45+ (generally speaking - this is not a hard cut off, more of a guideline). I've heard admissions folks say that if someone has a strong quant background in other areas (undergrad degree, work responsibilities), then they're not as concerned about a lower GMAT quant score.

For a 10-20 school, on the other hand, a Q44 would probably be okay, and so you could try to crank up verbal to lift the overall score.

In general, I do think it's a good idea always to do some amount of studying on both sides (unless one side is already maxed out). You have more room for improvement on your lower side but it's also usually easier to improve your strength - so study both!

No percentiles are not an input into a score. They are an output. Your score is calculated and that score has a percentile associated with it.
Stacey Koprince
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