I got a 178 on the July Flex thanks to 7Sage, a consistent study partner, a good study environment and luck!

My study methodology:

I took my diagnostic in February, and then did the 7Sage course over the next three months while working full-time (50 hour work weeks). I started diligently studying in mid-May: I took my first practice test 5/23, and started averaging ~168, and ~171 BR. My highest practice test was a 174.

I took the week of July 4th off from work, and starting doing drills. At this point I was doing PTs about every 3-4 days. I kept a spreadsheet tracking all the question types I'd missed, and did drills of the LR types I was missing most frequently (Flaw, Weaken, NA). For drills, I did smaller problem sets (~10 questions) of each problem type at each difficulty level (i.e. 1* Flaw, 2* Flaw, etc). My study partner (a close friend with a complimentary strengths) and I would often go over questions either one of us missed on a problem set, or once did an entire LR section together and talked through how to approach each problem and predict answers. RC was the section where I saw the most improvement: I went from -7 to -2/3 on problem sets. The key for me was reading quickly, but thoroughly and making sure I understood what each paragraph or shift in structure contributed to the overall meaning. I would highlight important names or key dates, and underline the main thesis. For the most part, I would get the answers right with my gut instinct, and the ones I missed were usually answers I had changed at the last minute. So, on test day, I just decided to trust my gut and not flip flop between answers. I'm also an avid reader and spent most of my downtime reading (when not studying or working), and I think that helped me quite a bit. LG was my strongest section from the start (my diagnostic was -0) and I was pretty consistent throughout my studying. The key for me was doing the initial games pretty quickly, so that if later games were tougher I had more than enough time to map out game boards or brute force the game.

I took a day off before the test where I just read a novel all day, and didn't stress about the test. On test day, I felt pretty calm, but walked out of the test having no clue how I did. My biggest piece of advice would be to not over-study, and to be relaxed on the day of the exam (even if it means forgoing some days of studying). I even signed up for the August Flex to relieve the stress of doing well on the July test. Good luck to you all!! Feel free to PM me with questions - this community really helped me when I was studying!

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18 comments

  • Thursday, Sep 10 2020

    Congratulations!!!

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  • Wednesday, Sep 09 2020

    CONGRATS!!!! Bumping @hkimdeborah582 's question!!

    0
  • Wednesday, Sep 09 2020

    Congrats!!! just wondering @hiyer1902 how many PTs did you take total??

    2
  • Wednesday, Sep 09 2020

    @sophiaanastazievsky287 said:

    way to gooooo!!!! out of curiosity, what was the novel you read the day prior to the test?

    Know My Name by Chanel Miller, super good read

    0
  • Monday, Aug 10 2020

    way to gooooo!!!! out of curiosity, what was the novel you read the day prior to the test?

    0
  • Monday, Aug 10 2020

    You go girl!! 🏅

    0
  • Friday, Aug 07 2020

    This is so impressive!!!!!

    0
  • Friday, Aug 07 2020

    Congrats!!

    0
  • Friday, Aug 07 2020

    holy moly...the most astounding thing in this (at least to me) is -0 on your diagnostic for logic games. Without having been familiar with the methodologies you must either have an exceptionally high aptitude for drawing inferences, or insanely fast mental processing speed for brute force - perhaps even both.

    Either way, amazing job. Sounds like you worked smart and worked consistently. Should hopefully inspire a lot of test takers; certainly inspiring to me.

    9
  • Friday, Aug 07 2020

    I'm a woman, but thank you

    20
  • Friday, Aug 07 2020

    Great job dude!!!!

    0
  • Thursday, Aug 06 2020

    I created the problem sets from questions from prep tests 38-59. They were questions I had not seen before.

    0
  • Thursday, Aug 06 2020

    Congratulations!!

    1
  • Thursday, Aug 06 2020

    When you were LR drilling, how did you create those problem sets? From old PTs or questions you hadn't done before?

    1
  • Wednesday, Aug 05 2020

    I took a week off of work to really study 100% during the week of July 4. During this time, I did LR drills (smaller problem sets of questions I was struggling with) and did a PT every 3-4 days. Before the test, I also took the Monday off (test was on Tuesday).

    And yes, highest PT was a 174 and score was a 178.

    1
  • Wednesday, Aug 05 2020

    Sorry just to clarify--your highest PT was 174 and you got a 178 on the actual exam? I may have read that wrong but if I didn't then congratulations! (congratulations either way of course)

    0
  • Tuesday, Aug 04 2020

    Congratulations! Thank you for posting, it's really helpful. When you say you "took the week of July 4th off, and starting doing drills," do you mean you took that week off of PTs but still did drills? Or you took a week off, then picked up with drills? I'm trying to map out one or two breaks or easy weeks leading up to my test date and wondering what might work best

    2
  • Tuesday, Aug 04 2020

    Congrats!!

    2

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