Folks, I am finally done with the LSAT!!! But that means I need to shift gears and start to focus on the second part of my JD/MBA application - the GMAT. What courses do people recommend? Are there any good free resources out there?
I haven't done a ton of research yet since I was really focused on the LSAT and I've only heard of Manhattan GMAT. ANybody has any thoughts on this company? Are there better courses/resources out there?
Thank you for any insight!
Comments
The LSAT took 3 months of full-time study first time round and another 3 the 2nd time round. It also involved lots of anger and frustration. Also there isn't the restriction on takes in a 2 year period but the general consensus is to keep it under 5?
I am also thinking the GMAT will be easier, which is why I decided to tackle it after the LSAT and I know there are more administrations of it which gives you more flexibility. However, not sure it will come as easy for me as these test have come to you. I definitely am not scoring close to 174 on the LSAT (we'll see how Dec '16 went, but probably not 174) and it took me much longer than 3 months to get ready for it. I think i might need a real refresher on the math stuff.
GMAT matters way less than the LSAT for admissions and the actual level of math required I would say is high school level? But there is a different element of problem solving and decision making involved, you don't get to come back to questions oftentimes spending 2minutes and guessing 50 50 is better than 5 minutes to definitively answer it. Spending too long on a difficult question might mean not enough time for an easy question you would definitely get right
@annaantonova1009 original guide. I believe there were like cheat sheets of what you were supposed to know for each section in terms of formulas and properties of stuff like integers and factorial that you learnt but forgot
You should have a look at the raw scaled conversions and a couple of practice questions.
I think its alot less intimidating when you think of whatever score you need as getting the easiest questions right and getting to 50 50 or one in 3 on the hardest ones