How
to get the Test Pacer watch >>
The watch is a wonderful
instrument. After taking the [GMAT] with the watch, I recommend
it to anyone who wants to have peace of mind while taking the
test.
B. Veisman,
New York City, USA
The "Test Pacer" is truly a
great tool for test takers. In addition to your training material,
the pacer helped me tremendously in working on my limitations.
Ajay Sinkre
Texas, USA
More Pacer Testimonials  |
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Pacing for the GMAT
Imagine a test where you can't
skip questions, all answers are final, there's a penalty for
not finishing on time, and you have to accelerate as the test
progresses....
.... That's the
GMAT CAT
Pacing
strategies are more critical and difficult on the GMAT
CAT (computer-adaptive test) than for any test you have ever
taken. To quote the makers of the GMAT, "Time management
is key." Your timing skills could add or subtract 100
points from your score. This
is becuase the test has highly unusual pacing constraints.
- DOUBLE PENALTY- for any unfinished questions at the
end of each section when time expires. The penalty for unfinished
questions is severe (worse than getting a question wrong). You
should pace yourself to make sure that you finish all the questions
in the allotted time.
.
- NO DOUBLE CHECKING- All answers are final. If you finish
a section early, you cannot go back to double check your earlier
answers. For example, if you hurry and finish your section with
20 minutes left, you are stuck at the end of the test with 20
extra minutes.
.
- NO SKIPPING- When you hit a tough question or get
a mental block, you cannot skip the question. Instead, you have
to trudge through it, guess, and hope you don't waste too much
time.
.
- GO FASTER AND
FASTER- The value of each
question decreases as the section progresses. The first few questions
will determine most of your score, so you have to start slowly
and carefully and then accelerate as the test progresses.
GMAT CAT students complained that
they had trouble learning the right pacing and that they wasted
their practice tests trying to master the GMAT CAT's complicated
pacing strategies. Faced with these complaints, we developed
our exclusive Test
Pacer
pacing system and built it into our practice tests.
How the Test
Pacer Works
The Test Pacer
tells you what question you should be on, depending on your skill
level, so that you pace yourself properly. For example, if the
Pacer displays '5.2,' that means that given your skill level,
you should be approximately on question five in order to finish
the test on time. This teaches you the right pacing interactively.
Like a training wheel, the more you use the Test Pacer,
the more you will develop your internal sense of timing and the
less you will need it. We built it into our 5
GMAT practice tests and it is also available as a watch.
Finishing the
Test on Time
The Test Pacer will guide you so that you can do every
question before time expires (there is a severe penalty for any
unfinished questions when time runs out). Following the Pacer
also helps you not to get stuck with too much time left over
at the end. You don't want to be too far ahead of pace or else
you will waste 10 or 20 minutes sitting on the last question.
You cannot go back to earlier questions on the new GMAT..
Accelerating
Properly
The CAT is engineered so that the early questions
count much more than the later questions. The result is that
you should start off slowly to get the early questions right
and then speed through the less important later questions. The
problem is that the natural human reaction is to go quickly at
the beginning (when you are nervous) and miss the most valuable
questions.
The Test Pacer shows you the proper acceleration pattern
so that you spend the most effort on the questions that count
the most and the least effort on the questions that count the
least. Try out the Test
Pacer on
the practice tests to get used to this awkward style.
| Question |
# 1-8 |
#9-20 |
#21-end |
| Pacer Guide |
The Test Pacer will be going slowly because the questions are
valuable. Use the Pacer as a brake to slow yourself down, particularly
for the all-important first 8 questions. Double-check yourself
before answering.
. |
The Test Pacer speeds up here to a normal pace. Be
careful, but not as cautious as earlier in the test. If you are
far ahead of pace by question #9, it may mean that you were not
careful enough with the important (slow) questions at the beginning.
. |
The Test Pacer goes quickly because the questions have little
value. Move rapidly and guess more frequently if you are behind.
. |
|
Knowing When
to Call It Quits
Suppose
that as you begin a question, the Test Pacer shows (question) 10.0. If you look again
later at the Test
Pacer and
it shows 11.5, you will know that you have already spent 1.5
times the suggested time for that question. You can immediately
tell if you have spent too much time on that question. This is
incredibly useful on the CAT, where you must constantly decide
if you should stick to a question or move on (knowing that you
can never go back to it).
Approximately
how much time you should spend on questions, depending on your
skill level.
| GMAT Question # |
1 - 8 |
9 - 20 |
21+ |
| High Scorer 85+ percentile |
2 min 10s |
2
min |
1 min 55s |
| Medium 51-84+ percentile |
2 min 20s |
1 min 55s |
1 min 45s |
| Low 1-50+ percentile |
2 min 40 |
1 min 45s |
1 min 40s |
|
Lower scorers spend more time on
the important early questions to get at least a few of them right.
Higher scorers scorers balance their time to get as many questions
right as possible.
Since the clock built into the GMAT doesn't
show seconds (except during the last five minutes), it is very
difficult to measure how much time you have invested in a question
(the Pacer does show seconds). You can use the pacer to
measure if you are spending too much time on a given question.
If you start a question and the pacer says 5.0 and you look at
it again and the pacer says 7.0, you know you have spent double
the amount of time normally required for a question. Also, adjust
yourself to spend slightly less time on the Sentence Correction
and Quantitative Comparison questions and more time on the Reading
Comprehension questions.
- If you have pacing problems
or are concerned about it being a problem, you should consider
using the Test
Pacer. The best way to see
how the pacing system works is to try it out on the free
sample test.
- Pacer Testimonials >>
- How to get the Test Pacer
watch >>
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