<p>Has anyone started thinking about these?(GMAT, GRE,LSAT, MCAT, blah) I am hoping to get started preparing for the GMAT and GRE tests(emphasis on the GMAT). So after 2 years work exp, and a 750+ GMAT, Stanford/Harvard/Wharton/Kellog/Sloan/Haas here I come.</p>
<p>Oh, you’re thinking about going into business admin? I’ve already started prepping for the GRE with Princeton Review’s book and I’ll buy Barron’s next year along with taking a prep course.</p>
<p>started practicing MCAT problems.</p>
<p>The iPhone has grad school practice tests that I’ve been dominating for a while. I stick with the GRE and GMAT. However, this isn’t exactly legitimate preparation. lol it certainly doesn’t hurt though!</p>
<p>sfwarrior, you planning on going into the ibanking field?</p>
<p>personally, too early to be thinking about grad school @@</p>
<p>Not studying for the test (LSAT) itself, but I’m planning on reading a lot of dense material.</p>
<p>yeah, planning on doing lsat stuff all summer and take it in september/october 175+ and harvard, yale, stanford, or colombia here i come</p>
<p>Yeah I wanna do ibanking actually. Im really interested in doing something in finance or possibly quant analysis.
Im starting to review for the GRE/GMAT this summer. Im hoping to squeeze in 1 year of work exp then get in for b school. So far I have spanked the GMAT quant section. hahaha</p>
<p>im also debating JD/MBA, i figure if i get into a school where law is king like Harvard I can backdoor my way too the B school</p>
<p>Realistically, how well could I potentially do in the math section of the GMAT if I only took up to Calc II? Would I need to study higher math?</p>
<p>how is it comparable to the SAT’s? I might do Public Policy, not sure</p>
<p>Its more the process of thinking about these questions. You will NEVER see any calculus on the GMAT. My training as an engineer has pretty much equipped me to answer these questions right and extremely fast. </p>
<p>Question samples:
“If Lynn can type a page in p minutes, what piece of the page can she do in 5 minutes?”
This question can easily be recognized as a simple dimensional analysis problem.
She types 1page per p minutes. So you cancel the units. hahaha.
The answer is 5/p.</p>
<p>“If Leah is 6 years older than Sue, and John is 5 years older than Leah, and the total of their ages is 41, then how old is Sue?”
Now this requires some abstract thinking…i lied. Its actually just an algebraic system. hahah. Set up your system and solve.
Leah = 6 + Sue
John = 5 + (6 + Sue)
John + Leah + Sue = 41.
plug and chug.</p>