Why Flash Cards?____________________________
Congratulations: You’ve mastered new GMAT content! We’re sorry to tell you, though, that mastering
a new concept today is far from a guarantee that your GMAT score will improve 2+ months from now.
The GM AT is like a college class where everything depends on the comprehensive final: there are no
quizzes, labs, papers, or projects along the way to buffer your grade from the final’s impact. On the day
that you go in to take the GMAT, you need to make sure that you have all your months of studying at
the forefront of your brain, ready to be called on at a moment’s notice. But you know this already. The
real question is how? The answer is review, and the secret weapon is flash cards.
If you follow this strategy to construct your flash card deck, you will have all of the math content (and
GMAT tricks) that you learned over a prolonged period in one handy place, easily transportable and
ready for review during those five minutes you have commuting on the train, waiting for your lunch
date, or even trying to fall asleep at night (much more productive than counting sheep).
The goal is to make a flash card out of every quantitative GMAT-type problem that taught you some
thing distinct that you want to remember on test day. They should not be problems that you found so
difficult that you did not even understand the solution when you went through it. Likewise, they should
not be the problems that you would have gotten right without a careless error. Sometimes they can be
the problems, though, that you got right, but only after much serious contempla
tion and much more than two minutes.
What’s the basic point? Don’t dilute your deck. Overall, your flash card deck
should grow to between 50 and 100 cards. A deck with over 100 cards is cum
bersome to review each week. Don’t forget that this is review of content you have
already covered; you still need to be spending the majority of your time learning
new content.
You can pull flash card problems from the Official Guide (OG), from your CAT tests, from problems
discussed in a prep course, and from the online Question Banks. The best problems, of course, are the
ones from the OG, because they are retired, authentic GMAT questions.
TIP
Consider making your flash
cards on 5" by 7" index cards to
ensure that you have enough
room for everything you want to
remember about a problem.
MANHATTAN
GMAT
Chapter 7
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