Friday, August 21, 2020
Blog Archive The Dos and Donts of GMAT CATs, Part 3
Blog Archive The Dos and Donâts of GMAT CATs, Part 3 With regard to the GMAT, raw intellectual horsepower helps, but it is not everything. Manhattan Prepâs Stacey Koprince teaches you how to perform at your best on test day by using some common sense. What are the Dos and Donâts to get the most out of your CATs? If you have not yet read the earlier installments of this series here and here, go take a look! DONâT take a practice CAT within five days of the real test Would you run a practice marathon a few days before a real marathon? Of course not! You risk tiring yourself out or (mentally) injuring yourself (by reducing your confidence) just before the real test. If your score is not where you want it to be, postpone the test; you are not going to change it substantially by taking a practice CAT at the last minute (or doing anything else). DONâT go months without taking a CAT When someone does this, the impetus is usually anxiety. You feel nervous that you will not get the results that you want, so you avoid getting any results at all. Alternatively, maybe you plan to study everything and then when you take the test, you are confident that you will get the score you want⦠but practicing without any CAT data is going to cause you to build bad habits (such as spending too much time on a question) and fail to build good ones (such as learning how and when to cut yourself off and guess). If your last CAT was so long ago that you are no longer sure what your strengths and weaknesses are under testing conditions, it is time to take another CAT. Takeaways In short, do take a CAT pretty early on in your study process. Then analyze the results and use that analysis to inform your study plan. When you have addressed a substantial proportion of the major issues identified via that analysis, take another CAT. Most of the time, you should be able to find at least two to three weeksâ worth of issues to address after every CAT. Once you have your score where you want it to be, start your final review. During this phase (which typically lasts a couple of weeks), plan to take one CAT two weeks before and another CAT one week before your real test date. Read the article âThe Last 14 Days: Building Your Game Planâ to learn what to do with this data. Good luck and happy studying! Share ThisTweet GMAT Blog Archive The Dos and Donâts of GMAT CATs, Part 3 With regard to the GMAT, raw intellectual horsepower helps, but it is not everything. Manhattan Prepâs Stacey Koprince teaches you how to perform at your best on test day by using some common sense. What are the Dos and Donâts to get the most out of your CATs? If you have not yet read the earlier installments of this series here and here, go take a look! DONâT take a practice CAT within five days of the real test Would you run a practice marathon a few days before a real marathon? Of course not! You risk tiring yourself out or (mentally) injuring yourself (by reducing your confidence) just before the real test. If your score is not where you want it to be, postpone the test; you are not going to change it substantially by taking a practice CAT at the last minute (or doing anything else). DONâT go months without taking a CAT When someone does this, the impetus is usually anxiety. You feel nervous that you will not get the results that you want, so you avoid getting any results at all. Alternatively, maybe you plan to study everything and then when you take the test, you are confident that you will get the score you want⦠but practicing without any CAT data is going to cause you to build bad habits (such as spending too much time on a question) and fail to build good ones (such as learning how and when to cut yourself off and guess). If your last CAT was so long ago that you are no longer sure what your strengths and weaknesses are under testing conditions, it is time to take another CAT. Takeaways In short, do take a CAT pretty early on in your study process. Then analyze the results and use that analysis to inform your study plan. When you have addressed a substantial proportion of the major issues identified via that analysis, take another CAT. Most of the time, you should be able to find at least two to three weeksâ worth of issues to address after every CAT. Once you have your score where you want it to be, start your final review. During this phase (which typically lasts a couple of weeks), plan to take one CAT two weeks before and another CAT one week before your real test date. Read the article âThe Last 14 Days: Building Your Game Planâ to learn what to do with this data. Good luck and happy studying! Share ThisTweet GMAT Blog Archive The Dos and Donâts of GMAT CATs, Part 3 With regard to the GMAT, raw intellectual horsepower helps, but it is not everything. Manhattan Prepâs Stacey Koprince teaches you how to perform at your best on test day by using some common sense. What are the Dos and Donâts to get the most out of your CATs? If you have not yet read the earlier installments of this series here and here, go take a look! DONâT take a practice CAT within five days of the real test Would you run a practice marathon a few days before a real marathon? Of course not! You risk tiring yourself out or (mentally) injuring yourself (by reducing your confidence) just before the real test. If your score is not where you want it to be, postpone the test; you are not going to change it substantially by taking a practice CAT at the last minute (or doing anything else). DONâT go months without taking a CAT When someone does this, the impetus is usually anxiety. You feel nervous that you will not get the results that you want, so you avoid getting any results at all. Alternatively, maybe you plan to study everything and then when you take the test, you are confident that you will get the score you want⦠but practicing without any CAT data is going to cause you to build bad habits (such as spending too much time on a question) and fail to build good ones (such as learning how and when to cut yourself off and guess). If your last CAT was so long ago that you are no longer sure what your strengths and weaknesses are under testing conditions, it is time to take another CAT. Takeaways In short, do take a CAT pretty early on in your study process. Then analyze the results and use that analysis to inform your study plan. When you have addressed a substantial proportion of the major issues identified via that analysis, take another CAT. Most of the time, you should be able to find at least two to three weeksâ worth of issues to address after every CAT. Once you have your score where you want it to be, start your final review. During this phase (which typically lasts a couple of weeks), plan to take one CAT two weeks before and another CAT one week before your real test date. Read the article âThe Last 14 Days: Building Your Game Planâ to learn what to do with this data. Good luck and happy studying! Share ThisTweet GMAT
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