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6 Month GRE Study Plan For Math Beginners

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6 Month GRE Study Plan for Math Beginners

BY MIKE MᶜGARRY ON MARCH 13, 2012 , UPDATED ON DECEMBER 22, 2017, IN GRE STUDY SCHEDULES

OK, you are starting more or less from scratch, and you want to prepare for the GRE in six
months. You need a GRE study schedule to organize yourself. I designed two different versions
of the six-month plan, and I need you to start with a little self-diagnosis. Which sounds most like
you?
• 6 Month GRE Study Plan for Math Beginners: I hate math! I desperately need help with it if
I going to survive the GRE at all! (You are here.)
• 6 Month GRE Study Plan (Advanced Math): I’m pretty good at math, and I really would like to
nail Quantitative section of the GRE.
NOTE: You are not sacrificing anything by studying this plan. All the information needed for a
stellar GRE performance will pass before your eyes: it is entirely up to you how quickly you
learn, how deeply you remember, how well you assimilate, etc. This plan includes quite of bit of
math practice and review, to help you get up to speed.
Do you need to adapt this study schedule to meet your needs? Check out this blog post for
adjustment tips!

Essential Materials:
• Magoosh GRE Prep
• ETS’s Official Guide to the GRE book (+ our free video explanations)
• ETS’s PowerPrep Online
• The Official GRE Quantitative Reasoning Practice Questions, for additional math practice
• The Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions, for additional verbal practice
• Magoosh’s online GRE Flashcards. They’re free and you can use them on the web, on
your iPhone/iPad or Android.
• Reading material: this may be any non-fiction scholarly book, history and social science
preferable. You may also choose one of the recommended magazines: Scientific
American, Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, National Geographic, The Economist, or The
New York Times (a Sunday subscription is a great idea!). You are reading (a) to build your
reading comprehension skills, (b) to refine your understanding of grammar and usage, and (c) to
expand your vocabulary.
• Barron’s New GRE, 19th edition (We don’t have a particularly high opinion of this book. We are
just going to use this volume for the practice tests.)
• McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• The Manhattan GRE 5 lb. Book of GRE Practice Problems (either edition) as well as Volumes
#1-6 of the Manhattan GRE books: in addition to Magoosh problems, you will also do a great
deal of math practice in these books. (NOTE: the MGRE series has 8 volumes in total, but we do
not recommend volumes 7 & 8).
• Manhattan’s 6 GRE online practice tests. One test is offered for free, with five additional
tests available for purchase.
• The GMAT Official Guide. You DO NOT need the most up-to-date edition. In fact, I
recommend getting an earlier edition (e.g. OG13 or OG12), which you probably can find used
for a fraction of the cost of the newest edition. You are going to use this as a bank of additional
practice problems for GRE reading comprehension. (I am not assigning any math out of this
book, but if you want more math practice, feel free to do the GMAT Problem Solving practice
questions, which are identical to GRE Multiple Choice math questions. GMAT math tends to be
a shade more difficult than GRE math.)
• a journal or notebook (yes, a physical hard copy item)
• notecards
• Magoosh’s GRE Complete Guide
This comprehensive, web-based guide to the GRE gives you the quick but very helpful overview
you need to understand this test. You’ll see how the GRE is designed and scored, what skills it
tests, how to find and use the best GRE prep, and how to study for each test section.
• A guide to GRE Practice Test Resources
This page includes instructions on where to find good full-length GRE practice tests, and how to
take practice tests and incorporate them into your studies. This page also has links to Magoosh’s
free GRE diagnostic quizzes.
NOTE: Don’t write in any of the test prep books, because for any of them, after a period of time
you may want to go back and do a problem again that you haven’t seen for a while. You can
only start it fresh if the page is free of your marks.

Supplemental/Optional Materials:
Any of the steps listed in the schedule for the materials below are purely for extra practice, so
they are to be done as optional tasks if you have extra time.

• Download the Magoosh Android or iPhone app, for mobile practice


• Quizlet.com — gives you online access to flashcards, making it easier, say, to quiz yourself on
your mobile device
• Vocabulary.com: provides conversational example sentences and a flood of example sentences
• Word Dynamo — give you little quizzes & games to add some variety to vocab learning
Bonus: Watch this video for tips on how to use Magoosh’s GRE study schedules.
A NOTE ON LEARNING GRE VOCABULARY: First of all, it’s important not only to learn
the literal dictionary definition (the denotation), but also to understand the metaphorical use of
the word in context (the connotation). For example, the word “opaque” literally means “not
transparent”, but metaphorically it can mean “hard to understand” or, describing a person, it
can mean “thick-headed, stupid.” Ultimately, you should strive to learn both the denotation and
the connotation of each word.
Daily review of vocab is vital. I wrote this schedule recommending the Magoosh’s GRE
Flashcards, but DO NOT limit yourself to just these words. AS YOU READ and find more words
you don’t know, look them up, make flashcards (including context), and make your own
flashcard decks. You could have one pile for words whose denotation you are trying to master,
another containing words for which you know the denotation but not the connotation, and a
“done” stack that gets reviewed only rarely.
This six-month plan enjoins a relaxed pace that should be followed diligently, lest things get out
of hand through procrastination. It’s designed to have you improve as much as you can improve
in a six months. I have designed 25 weeks, assuming 1-2 hours for each of the five weekdays,
and one 4-5 stint on weekends, mostly in the second half (“Day Six”). If you would prefer to
work on both weekend days, and free up some weeknight time, feel free to make those
changes. Notice that a six-month period is actually 26 weeks, so I have left one week free,
knowing that inevitably something (a camping trip, a wedding, etc.) will arise and interrupt
studying for about a week. If you can work straight through, that gives you more time for
concentrated review at the end. NOTE: Many folks find that each day’s assignments take 1-2
hours, although times to complete them will vary for different students.
NOTE: In this plan, you do NOT focus exclusively on one math topic, binge on that one thing,
master it, then move to the next and repeat. That design is NOT a good model for how the brain
learns. This plan “spirals” in a variety of ways. You will learn math topics in one order in the
Magoosh lessons, in another order in the Manhattan GRE series of books, and yet another order
in the Manhattan GRE 5-lb book. Furthermore, the Magoosh practice questions will be entirely
mixed in topic. Every time you come back to a topic, be very perceptive about exactly what
aspects you remembered and exactly what aspects you forget. Always ask yourself: how can I
understand this topic more deeply this time around? In all likelihood, different things about the
topic will stick in your head when you learn about it from a different source: notice what you
aspects about the topic make sense this time around. By intermittent reinforcement, deepening a
little more each time, you will achieve cohesive comprehension over time.
NOTE: As much as possible, get enough sleep during this period, especially in the last couple
months. REM sleep plays an important role in encoding long term memory, and in an eight hour
period of sleep, the last hour has the most REM. If you are getting 7 hours/night instead of 8
hours/night, you are depriving your brain of one of its most powerful systems for learning and
remembering. Caffeine and energy drinks will keep you feeling awake if you don’t get enough
sleep, but they don’t do bupkis to replace the lost opportunity to encode more information into
long term memory.
As you move through this plan, I will recommend that you also put into practice stress-reduction
techniques. If you can practice these regularly, then you will be excellent shape by test
day. These are four GMAT blogs, but everything here is just as relevant for the GRE:

1. Overcome Exam Anxiety: Breathe


2. Stress and Your Thoughts
3. Stress and Your Stories
4. Zen Boot Camp for Test-taking

A note about additional materials:


Magoosh contains all the information you need for wild success on the exam and many students
have achieved spectacular results using nothing but Magoosh. Nevertheless, this plan
recommends that you buy additional materials and use them, in addition to the Magoosh
materials. Here’s why: These plans were structured with far-reaching pedagogical principles in
mind, and a deep consideration for how the human brain learns. Most people cannot hear or read
something just once and, from that single hearing, remember it completely and understand it
fully.

At Magoosh, we are very ambitious for our students; we want them to learn as thoroughly and as
masterfully as possible. We recommend using these additional resources to provide additional
practice, alternative explanations, and extra review. Not every student will need or want
additional materials, but for those who do, the books we recommend are the best for the overall
goal of doing very well on the exam.

Week One
1) Go to ETS.org/gre, and read about the content of the GRE. Click on and read each sub-
heading link.
2) In the GRE Official Guide,

• Read Chapter 1, “Introducing the GRE revised General Test”


• Read Chapter 2, “GRE Analytic Writing” (just the descriptions of the question, not all the
sample material)
• Read the introductory few pages of Chapter 3, “GRE Verbal Reasoning” (everything up to the
sample questions)
• Read the introductory few pages of Chapter 5, “GRE Quantitative Reasoning” (everything up to
the sample questions)
3) Work through the GRE Math Review in the Official Guide. Take notes in your journal on
whatever is unfamiliar. Do the four Exercises sets as you come to the end of each section, and
correct your answers right after you do each Exercise set. Take note in your journal on what you
got wrong. If you can’t figure out why you’re wrong from re-reading the Math Review, then ask
us at Magoosh. — If, in this process, you find you remember a lot more math than you thought,
or that you are better at it than you thought, you might wish to reconsider which six-month study
plan you are following.

4) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• Intro to the GRE module


• General Math Strategies module
5) Read half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from The Economist,
and multiple chapters from your books.
6) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, I suggest mastering 10 words each day. For each
word, make sure the denotation and connotation is understood. Each day, review your stack of
flashcards.
7) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start practicing the Algebra deck.

8) In Magoosh, set up a practice session by clicking on the “Practice” link in the header. For
Math, uncheck all of the subjects, set the difficulty to “adaptive,” the question pool to
“unanswered”, the number of questions, the time to “no limit,” and the mode to “practice
mode.” Do the following practice sets:

• 25 Multiple Choice math questions


NOTE: For all Magoosh questions — If you get the question wrong, watch the video
explanation, and take notes in your journal on whatever you need to learn from the question. If
you got the question right, simply skim the text solution (below the video), to verify you got the
question right for the right reason.
NOTE: Notice in the Magoosh math questions, you are doing all topics from the get-go, whether
you have already studied these or not. This means that you will make mistakes at the beginning:
that’s fine! See this post on a productive attitude toward making mistakes. If, after a week or so
of practice, you find that there is way too much new material for you, then narrow your studies
to those topics you’re more actively studying plus one or two that you’re unfamiliar with. You
should be constantly challenged. If you do narrow the topics of study, expand back to as wide a
scope as possible as quickly as possible. If you can only do problems on a particular topic when
you are “in the mode” for that particular topic, then you do not yet have a GRE-ready level of
understanding. You are only GRE-ready if you can solve problems as they arise in mixed-topic
practice: cold and with no particular preparation on that topic. That’s what the test will
demand. See this GMAT post for more on levels of understanding, and this one on the value of
mixed-topic practice.
9) In Magoosh, set up a practice session by clicking on the “Practice” link in the header. For
Verbal, again select “Adaptive.” Do the following practice sets:

• 10 Sentence Equivalence verbal questions


10) In the GMAT Official Guide (any edition)

• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the first RC passage and answer
the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the first five CR questions
NOTE: The GMAT Critical Reasoning provides excellent practice for the GRE Reading
Comprehension Paragraph Argument questions. Some folks think that the LSAT Logical
Reasoning questions are a little bit closer to the GRE RC PA questions. I am recommending the
GMAT CR questions only because you have the book anyway for the GMAT Reading
Comprehension. If you would prefer to practice LSAT problems instead, get any book of LSAT
practice tests and practice the LSAT Logical Reasoning questions instead of the GMAT Critical
Reasoning questions. Either one will prepare you very well for the GRE Reading Comprehension
Paragraph Argument questions.
11) GRE Blogs: Read the following two blogs

• Coming Back to Math After Years Away


• How To Do GRE Math Faster

Week One, Day Six:


1) Download and start reading the Magoosh eBook: A Complete Guide to the Revised GRE
• This will give you an excellent overview of the entire test.
2) Download and skim the Magoosh Math Formula eBook
• You will learn all of these as part of this plan. Simply notice how many look familiar right
now. You may find it helpful, a few times during the six-months, to review to this as a way of
measuring how much your math skills have solidified.
3) Download and skim the Magoosh GRE Vocabulary eBook
• Read the strategy section (“Making Words Stick”). Use this book’s word lists and its way of
clustering together either related words or words important to distinguish as a complement to
your other vocabulary learning. When you learn a new word, say, from the Magoosh GRE
Flashcards and you remember it was one listed here, go back to review the connections here.
4) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do the Math Diagnostic test (pp. 27-32)
Keep a 35 minute time limit, and use no calculator at all. This will give you a good sense of
what you most need to practice. When you are done with this and with any math practice, skim
the explanations of the questions you got right, to verify that you got them right for the right
reasons. Study carefully the explanations of any questions you got wrong, taking notes on
anything unfamiliar. As you learn topics in the Magoosh videos or in the Manhattan GRE series
of books, you may want to come back and review the problems you got wrong on this and try to
understand it at a deeper level.

Week Two:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Arithmetic and Fractions module


• The Percents and Ratios module
NOTE: at the end of any math module with a quiz, take the quiz, and continue to review and
retake it on successive days until you can pass.
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Read Chapter #1-6; do all exercises in the course of those pages.
NOTE: For exercises in the McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math book: As soon as
you work through an exercise set, correct your work. See if you can figure out your mistake on
your own first, and then read the solutions thorough, taking notes in your journal on whatever
was new, unfamiliar, or confusing.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 7 Arithmetic
NOTE: the problems sets in this book start very easy, and increase in difficulty. You should
definitely do the first 20 problems in each chapter, and if you are having reasonable success,
continue through to the rest of the problems. Even if you give up on the last few problems, make
sure to read the explanations for them so that you learn from them and understand them.
NOTE: We recommend all the math problems in this book, because they are of very high
quality. We do not recommend the verbal material in this book.
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.
6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Algebra deck.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
NOTE: Some of Magoosh’s GRE RC questions are stand-alone questions, the Paragraph
Argument questions, but questions that come with a passage are batched with that
passage. Always do all the questions associated with a passage in one sitting. This may mean
some weeks, you do a little more or a little less than 15 RC questions: that’s fine, as long as you
keep up about an average of 15.
9) In the Manhattan GRE series,

• Read Volume 1: Algebra, and do all the practice problems as you work through the book.
NOTE: Instead of an official “Day Six” assignment, some of these early weeks you will be
working through one of the Manhattan GRE volumes and some problems from the GRE Verbal
Practice book. You don’t have to do all the other practice on weekdays and read these two
books only on the weekend! You get to decide how you want to distribute the work of this week
so that it most makes sense for you. Because of the extra work of reading through the extra
book, you are not assigned a formal Day Six. Use Day Six simply to finish the week’s work.
10) In the Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions book
• Skim the first two chapters: most of that should be familiar.
• In Ch. 3, do the Reading Comprehension practice sets, starting on p. 18. Correct your work
when you are done.

Week Two, Day Six


See note above.
Week Three:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Integer Properties module


• The Writing (AWA) module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Read Chapter 7, up to the first Number Properties test. Do the Practice Problems and the
Numbers Properties Test 1.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 8 Algebra
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Fractions, Ratios, and Percents
deck. Continue to review the previous deck.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Manhattan GRE series,

• Read Volume 2: Fractions, Decimals, & Percents, and do all the practice problems as you work
through the book.
10) In the Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions book
• In Ch. 4, do the Text Completion practice sets, starting on p. 58. Correct your work when you
are done.
Week Three, Day Six
See note for Week 2, item #9.

Week Four:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Algebra module


• The Text Completion – Overview module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue working through Chapter 7, up to the second Number Properties Test 2. Do all
associated sets of Practice Problems up to and including the Numbers Properties Test 2.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 9 Inequalities and Absolute Values
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Fractions, Ratios, and Percents
deck. Continue to review the previous deck. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
Week Four, Day Six
1) On Magoosh

• Take a practice GRE. You launch the practice test from the Dashboard, following the link:
“Take a practice test.”
• As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.
NOTE: as you do practice questions from Magoosh over the coming months, you will see some
repeat questions at various points. That’s actually a great opportunity for you: if you get the
question wrong the first time, can you learn from it sufficiently so that, when it reappears out of
the blue months later, you can nail it? The mark of an excellent student is never to make the
same mistake twice. How deeply do you have to understand the mistake you make here, so that
you can nail these questions when you see them again at some point down the line?
NOTE: This is the first time in this plan that you wrote two GRE-style essays, the Issue task and
the Argument task. Once you are done with the test, copy what you have written in to a Word
doc.
Now that you have these essays, what do you do with them? If you have a friend or mentor who
is a gifted writer, ask them to read the essays for you and critique them. If they are willing, you
can show them the assessment criteria in the GRE Official Guide, and ask them to follow it. If
you can afford it, hire a writing coach or writing tutor: show that tutor the assessment criteria in
the OG, and have them give you feedback. If you can’t afford a writing tutor and can’t convince
anyone else to read it, you may try posting them on TheGradCafe, and see whether an expert
there will critique your essay. Failing any of these options, at least you can set the essays aside,
and in a couple days re-read them with the Official Guide’s rubric beside you. (Notice whatever
route worked for you with these essays; you can repeat that will all the essays you write in the
practice tests you take as part of this plan.)

Week Five:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Word Problems module


• The Text Completion – No Shifts module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Do the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE Practice Problems at the end of Chapter 7. In
Chapter 8, read through the first two sets of Practice Problems, and do those Practice Problems.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 10 Functions, Formulas, and Sequences
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start learning the Geometry deck. Continue to review
the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Numerical Entry math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Manhattan GRE series,

• Read Volume 3: Geometry, and do all the practice problems as you work through the book.
10) In the Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions book
• In Ch. 5, do the Sentence Completion practice sets, starting on p. 80. Correct your work when
you are done.
Week Five, Day Six
See note for Week 2, item #9.

Week Six:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Power and Roots module


• The Text Completion – Sentence Shifts module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter 8. Do all the associated sets of Practice Problems up to, but not
including, the Arithmetic Computation Test 1.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 11 Fractions and Decimals
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.
6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Geometry deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Multiple Answer math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Six, Day Six


In the GRE Official Guide:
a) in Official Guide, do the Verbal Reasoning Practice Sets 1-6

b) in Official Guide, do the Quantitative Reasoning Practice Sets 1-4

Treat this as a quasi-mock GRE. Do consecutive batches of 2-3 set without interruption, to
simulate more effectively a real GRE. Set a timer for the time limits. Here are the time limits to
observe:

• Official Guide Verbal Reasoning Set 1 = 12 minutes


• Official Guide Verbal Reasoning Set 2 = 15 minutes
• Official Guide Verbal Reasoning Set 3 = 12 minutes
• Official Guide Verbal Reasoning Set 4 = 15 minutes
• Official Guide Verbal Reasoning Set 5 = 14 minutes
• Official Guide Verbal Reasoning Set 6 = 16 minutes
• Official Guide Quantitative Reasoning Set 1 = 22 minutes
• Official Guide Quantitative Reasoning Set 2 = 23 minutes
• Official Guide Quantitative Reasoning Set 4 = 11 minutes
In addition, do this section. This last section consists of HARD math questions. If you want a
challenge, do it with the time constraints, but if you are not looking for an extra mathematical
challenge, then just go through these problems untimed.
• Official Guide Quantitative Reasoning Set 3 (24 minutes)
After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out. You can also watch the Magoosh
Video Explanations of the OG practice questions.

Week Seven:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Geometry module


• The Text Completion – Double Blanks module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Do the Arithmetic Computation Test 1, as well as the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE
Practice Problems that follow it.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 12 Percents
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start learning the Number Properties I deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Numeric Entry math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Manhattan GRE series,

• Read Volume 4: Number Properties, and do all the practice problems as you work through the
book.
10) In the Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions book
• In Ch. 6, do the Mixed Practice Set I, starting on p. 102. Correct your work when you are done.

Week Seven, Day Six


See note for Week 2, item #9.

Week Eight:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Coordinate Geometry module


• The Text Completion – Triple Blanks module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter 8, through to the section “Motion and Work Problems.” Do the three
associated sets of Practice Problems in that stretch.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 13 Divisibility and Primes
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Number Properties I


deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Multiple Answer math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Eight, Day Six


1) In Barron’s New GRE book
• Take Model Test #1. Write the essays on your computer, in Word. As much as possible, try to
mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in between sections. Only eat
the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real GRE. Note how your sleep the
night before affects your work. Note how what you had for dinner the previous night and what
you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and concentration. Write any
observations in your journal.
• Take the whole test, and as soon as you are done, grade yourself. For whatever you got wrong,
first try to figure it out yourself, and then read & study the explanations, taking notes on
whatever you got wrong — whatever about the concepts or the questions format was unclear.

Week Nine:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Statistics module


• The Sentence Equivalence module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter 8, though the section “Types of Averages”; do the three associated sets
of Practice Problems in that stretch.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 14 Exponents and Roots
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.
5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start learning the Number Properties II deck. Continue
to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Manhattan GRE series,

• Read Volume 5: Word Problems, and do all the practice problems as you work through the book.
10) In the Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions book
• In Ch. 6, do the Mixed Practice Set II, starting on p. 126. Correct your work when you are done.

Week Nine, Day Six


See note for Week 2, item #9.

Week Ten:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Counting module


• The Vocabulary module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter Eight, through the section on “Simple Probability”; do the two
associated sets of Practice Problems in that stretch, everything up to but not including
“Arithmetic Computation Test 2.”
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 15 Number Properties
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Number Properties II


deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Ten, Day Six


1) In Barron’s New GRE book
• Take Model Test #2. Write the essays on your computer, in Word. As much as possible, try to
mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in between sections. Only eat
the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real GRE. Note how your sleep the
night before affects your work. Note how what you had for dinner the previous night and what
you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and concentration. Write any
observations in your journal.
• Take the whole test, and as soon as you are done, grade yourself. For whatever you got wrong,
first try to figure it out yourself, and then read & study the explanations, taking notes on
whatever you got wrong — whatever about the concepts or the questions format was unclear.
Week Eleven:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The Probability module


• The Reading Comprehension module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Do the Arithmetic Computation Test 2, as well as the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE
Practice Problems at the end of Chapter Eight.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 16 Word Properties
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start learning the Statistics and Probability
deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 20 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Manhattan GRE series,

• Read Volume 6: Quantitative Comparisons & Data Interpretation, and do all the practice
problems as you work through the book.
• This is the last math volume in that series. I do not assign any more formal work from these
books in this schedule, but keep these books in mind for reference. If, later in the program, you
need to brush up on some topic, these six volumes are once source you can consult.
10) In the Official GRE Verbal Reasoning Practice Questions book
• In Ch. 6, do the Mixed Practice Set III, starting on p. 152. Correct your work when you are
done.
• I will not assign anything else from this book, since we worked all the way through it, but feel
free to come back to it for review.

Week Eleven, Day Six


See note for Week 2, item #9.

Week Twelve:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

• The GRE Data Interpretation module


• The Advanced Quantitative Comparison Strategies module
• The Paragraph Argument module
• At this point, you should have seen each Magoosh video lesson once.
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Begin reading Chapter Nine, through “Radical Expressions”; do the three associated sets of
Practice Problems, everything up but not including “Algebra Test 2.”
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 17 Two-Variable Word Properties
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Statistics and Probability
deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following:

• If you took a full Magoosh practice test way back on Week 4, Day 6 (about eight weeks ago),
then at this point, you should be close to running out of Magoosh questions. If the remaining
questions are enough for you to do in a week, then do all the unanswered questions, so that you
have done each Magoosh question once. At that point, you will reset all the stats in your
Magoosh account, and re-do all the Magoosh questions over the next half of the plan. Many of
the Magoosh students who see the biggest score increase do all the Magoosh questions more than
once.
• If, at the beginning of this week, you have considerably more questions than you could finish in
one week, then do a load of Magoosh questions comparable to that of Week 11, #8, and keep
doing that until you have a week in which you finish the questions. At that point, reset the stats.

Week Twelve, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take one of the paper-based GREs in the back of the Official Guide,
Practice Test #1, beginning on p. 303. For each of the essays, write the essay in a word-
processing program on the computer, and keep a strict time limit. For the other sections, you can
write the answers either in a word-processing program on the computer, or on paper: just don’t
write in the book. Observe strict time-limits for each section.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out. You should also watch the Magoosh
video explanations for the first practice test, at the bottom of that page.
Week Thirteen:
1) In Magoosh, watch the following videos

At this point, you will begin re-watching the entire Magoosh lesson library. If you have been
performing well in Verbal, you could skip or skim the Verbal lessons. Because you have
identified as a student who struggles with math, I will recommend that you watch the
Quantitative lesson videos again. As you watch, pay very close attention to what you
remembered and what you understand better this time around.

• The Intro to the GRE module


• The General Math Strategies module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Do the Algebra Test 1, as well as the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE Practice Problems
immediately following that test.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 18 Rates and Work
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Mixed Practice I deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• See the note at Week 12, #8. Starting at this week, I will assume that you finished all the
Magoosh questions. If you have, start re-doing the questions with the ones below, and the ones
for following weeks. If you still have unanswered Magoosh questions, finish them first, and
after you reset, jump into the questions for whatever week you are on.
• 25 Multiple Choice math problems
• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Official GRE Quantitative Reasoning Practice Questions book
• Skim Ch. 1-2: these should be entirely review at this point
• Do all the practice problem sets in
• Chapter 3 Arithmetic
• Chapter 4 Algebra
• Chapter 5 Geometry
• Do the problems, then correct your work
For this week, there is no formal Day Six assignment. Because you have the extra work from
this book, there is no additional Day Six work. You do NOT have to do everything else before
the weekend, and do the Quantitative Reasoning book only on the weekend! You get to choose
how to distribute the work of the week so that it best works for you.

Week Thirteen, Day Six


See note above, in item #10.

Week Fourteen:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Arithmetic and Fractions module


• The Percents and Ratios module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter Nine, through the section “Factoring Algebraic Expression.” Do the
three associated sets of Practice Problems.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 19 Variables-in-the-Choices Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Mixed Practice I deck. Continue
to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.
7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)
• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Fourteen, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take the other of the paper-based GREs in the back of the Official
Guide, Practice Test #2, beginning on p. 431. For each of the essays, write the essay in a word-
processing program on the computer, and keep a strict time limit. For the other sections, you can
write the answers either in a word-processing program on the computer, or on paper: just don’t
write in the book. Observe strict time-limits for each section.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out. You should also watch the Magoosh
video explanations for the second practice test.

Week Fifteen:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos
• The Integer Properties module
• The Writing (AWA) module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter Nine, up to the Algebra Test 2. Do all associated sets of Practice
Problems and do the Algebra Test 2.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 20 Ratios Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Mixed Practice II deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
9) In the Official GRE Quantitative Reasoning Practice Questions book do all the practice
problem sets in:
• Chapter 6 Data Analysis
• Chapter 7 Mixed Practice Sets = do all three sets
• Do the problems, then correct your work
As in Week 13, there is no formal Day Six assignment for this week. Because you have the extra
work from this book, there is no additional Day Six work. You do NOT have to do everything
else before the weekend, and do the Quantitative Reasoning book only on the weekend! You get
to choose how to distribute the work of the week so that it best works for you.

Week Fifteen, Day Six


See the note above, in item #9.

Week Sixteen:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Algebra module


• The Text Completion – Overview module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• In Chapter Nine, do the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE Practice Problems immediately after
the “Algebra Test 2.” Then, continue reading, through the section “Equations with Radicals”,
and do the Practice Problems at the end of that section.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 21 Averages, Weighted Averages, Mean, and Mode Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Mixed Practice II


deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
Week Sixteen, Day Six
1) Today, you are going to take a full-length practice test, using the first of the six Manhattan
GRE practice tests online.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

Week Seventeen:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Word Problems module


• The Text Completion – No Shift module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• In Chapter Nine, continue reading through the section “Quadratic Equations and Inequalities,”
and do the three associated sets of Practice Problems.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 22 Standard Deviation and Normal Distribution Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Mixed Practice III deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.
7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)
• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Numerical Entry math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Seventeen, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to write two essays, half an hour each. You will write an Issue essay
and an Argument essay. You will be writing on the official GRE topics.

For topics, go to the ETS GRE Issue Pool and the ETS GRE Argument Pool. Figure out a way to
pick topics at random (maybe you print the lists, cut it into slips of paper, and choose some at
random). Write the essays in a word processing program. Observe a strict 30 minute time limit
for each.
Now that you have these essays, what do you do with them? If you have a friend or mentor who
is a gifted writer, ask them to read the essays for you and critique them. If they are willing, you
can show them the assessment criteria in the Official Guide, and ask them to follow it. If you can
afford it, hire a writing coach or writing tutor: show that tutor the assessment criteria in the OG,
and have them give you feedback. If you can’t afford a writing tutor and can’t convince anyone
else to read it, you may try posting them on TheGradCafe, and see whether an expert there will
critique your essay. Failing any of these options, at least you can set the essays aside, and in a
couple days re-read them with the Official Guide’s rubric beside you. (Notice whatever route
worked for you with these essays; you can repeat that will all the essays you write in the practice
tests you take as part of this plan.)
2) This first time visiting these sites, it may be worthwhile to take some time to peruse all the
topics, just to get a sense of the variety.
3) Writing the essays will not take much time. This day might be a good time to do a thorough
review of all the flashcards you have covered so far, or to review anything in any of the
Manhattan GRE books that you would like to understand better.

Week Eighteen:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Powers and Roots module


• The Text Completion – Sentence Shift module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter Nine, through the entire long section “Algebraic Word Problems,” and
do the two associated sets of Practice Problems. This is everything up to, but not including,
“Algebra Test 3.”
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 23 Probability, Combinatorics, and Overlapping Sets Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Mixed Practice III
deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Multiple Answer math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
Week Eighteen, Day Six
1) Today, you are going to take a full-length practice test, using another of the six Manhattan
GRE practice tests online.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

Week Nineteen:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Geometry module


• The Text Completion – Double Blanks module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• In Chapter Nine, do the Algebra Test 3, as well as the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE
Practice Problems at the end of the chapter.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 24 Data Interpretation Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.
6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Mixed Practice IV deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Numeric Entry math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Nineteen, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to write two more essays, half an hour each. You will write an Issue
essay and an Argument essay. Again, you will be writing on the official GRE topics.

For topics, go to the ETS GRE Issue Pool and the ETS GRE Argument Pool. Figure out a way to
pick topics at random (maybe you print the lists, cut it into slips of paper, and choose some at
random). Write the essays in a word processing program. Observe a strict 30 minute time limit
for each.
Once you are done, use the whatever review process worked for the other essays.

2) Writing the essays will not take much time. This day might be a good time to do a thorough
review of all the flashcards you have covered so far, or to review anything in any of the
Manhattan GRE books that you would like to understand better.

Week Twenty:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Coordinate Geometry module


• The Text Completion – Triple Blanks module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Read Chapter Ten, through the section “Triangles,” and do the three associated sets of Practice
Problems.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 25 Polygon and Rectangular Solids Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue review the Mixed Practice IV deck. Continue
to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Multiple Answer math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Twenty, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take a full-length practice test, using another of the six Manhattan
GRE practice tests online. From this point forward, through the end of the plan, every Day Six
will be a practice GRE on the computer.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

Week Twenty One:


1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Sentence Explanation module


2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter Ten, through the section “Circles,” and do the three associated sets of
Practice Problems.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 26 Circles and Cylinders Solids Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Mixed Practice V deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Twenty One, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take a full-length practice test, using another of the six Manhattan
GRE practice tests online.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

Week Twenty Two:


1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Counting module


• The Vocabulary module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Continue reading Chapter Ten, through the section “Coordinate Geometry,” and do the two
associated sets of Practice Problems. This will be everything up to, but not including, the
“Geometry Test.”
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 27 Triangles Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.
5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Mixed Practice V


deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Twenty Two, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take a full-length practice test, using another of the six Manhattan
GRE practice tests online.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.
Week Twenty Three:
1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The Probability module


• The Reading Comprehension module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• Do the Geometry Test as well as the Solved GRE Problems and the GRE Practice Problems at
the end of Chapter Ten.
3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:
• Do Ch. 28 Coordinate Geometry Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, start studying the Mixed Practice VI deck. Continue to
review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Twenty Three, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take a full-length practice test, using the last of the six Manhattan
GRE practice tests online.
As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

Week Twenty Four:


1) In Magoosh, re-watch the following videos

• The GRE Data Interpretation module


• The Advanced Quantitative Comparison Strategies module
• The Paragraph Analysis module
2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math
• (a) Review whatever sections you feel you need to review

(b) In one 35-minute sitting, do GRE Math Practice Section 2.

3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:


• Do Ch. 29 Mixed Geometry Problems
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing the Mixed Practice VI


deck. Continue to review the previous decks. Do a little review with these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the next RC passage and
answer the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the next five CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 10 Data Interpretation math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions

Week Twenty Four, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take another full length practice test, the first practice GRE available
through PowerPrep Online.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.

After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

Week Twenty Five:


1) In Magoosh, re-watch the any video lessons that you think you need to review or understand
in greater depth.

2) In McGraw Hill’s Conquering the New GRE Math


• (a) Review whatever sections you feel you need to review
(b) In one 35-minute sitting, do GRE Math Practice Section 3.

3) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems:


• In Ch. 33 Math Practice Sessions, do Math Practice Session #1: Easy Difficulty and, on another
day, Math Practice Session #2: Medium Difficulty. Do those two with strict time limits, and
don’t touch a calculator.
4) Read at least half-an-hour each day. In a week, you should read 4-6 full articles from
periodicals of your choice, and multiple chapters from your books. As you read, note
grammatical structures, and look up and write down any words you don’t know.

5) In Magoosh’s GRE Vocabulary Flashcards, look over the next 50 words. I suggest doing 10
words each day. Each day, review at least some of your flashcard decks.

6) In Magoosh’s GRE Math Flashcards, continue reviewing all the decks. Do a little review with
these each day.

7) GMAT Official Guide (any edition)


• In Section 7.4, Reading Comprehension Practice Questions, read the last RC passage and answer
the associated questions
• In Section 8.4, Critical Reasoning Practice Questions, answer the remaining CR questions
8) In Magoosh, do the following problems

• 25 Multiple Choice math problems


• 10 Quantitative Comparison math problems
• 15 Text Completion verbal questions
• 10 Sentence Equivalence questions
• 15 Reading Comprehension questions
NOTE: if you reset at week 12, and have been working continually since then, you may be about
out of unanswered questions again.

Week Twenty Five, Day Six


1) Today, you are going to take your last full length practice test, the second practice GRE
available through PowerPrep Online.

As much as possible, try to mimic the GRE conditions. Give yourself relatively short breaks in
between sections. Only eat the kinds of snacks that you are planning to bring to the real
GRE. Note how your sleep the night before affects your work. Note how what you had for
dinner the previous night and what you had to eat earlier that day affects your energy level and
concentration. Write any observations in your journal.
After you are done, check all your answers. For any question you got right, skim the explanation
to verify that you got it right for the right reason. For any question you got wrong, read the
explanation thorough, taking notes in your journal on any concepts you didn’t understand and
anything about the question format that psyched you out.

After Week 25: Concentrated Review


At this point, if you have been following the schedule, you should have done every question in
just about every book at least once. For whatever days remain before the test, keep up work on
GRE math and verbal. Some suggestions for what to do:

1) Through selecting question type & difficulty on the “Dashboard”, do Magoosh problems over
again, and see how you do this time.

2) Keep watching for an additional time 5-10 Magoosh lesson videos a week, on whatever topics
you feel you need to review

3) Keep reading your challenging material, to build vocabulary and acclimate your ear to
eloquent style.

4) Keep drilling your vocab flashcards and your math flashcards.

5) In the Manhattan GRE 5-lb Book of Practice Problems, I didn’t assign the final Ch. 33
Practice Set, the “Hard Difficulty” set. If you are ambitious, you could try this as another timed
section. If not, at least work those problem untimed, for further practice.
6) Re-read any topics in the Manhattan GRE books or in McGraw-Hill’s Conquering the New
GRE Math — any topics where you feel you would benefit from further review.

Day before the test:


1. No GRE preparation all day
2. Eat a large, healthy, leisurely dinner – no alcohol!
3. Go to bed earlier than usual.
Day of test
1. ABSOLUTELY NO LAST MINUTE GRE PREPARATION!
2. Eat a large breakfast, full of protein
3. Do relaxing, fun activities to pass time until the test

Bring to the test


1. A liter of water
2. Healthy energy-packed snacks (nuts, protein bar, etc.)
3. On breaks, make sure to get up, move & stretch – moving & stretching the large muscles of the
body (legs & torso) will get oxygen flowing throughout, which will help keep you awake and
keep you thinking clearly.

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