It contains my experience and inputs from many classmates.
1. Lack of Practice:
I was working with an IT MNC; my work didn’t give me much room to self-study. So, with limited available with me, I took an approach where I solved only a few questions from each chapter and for the rest, I used to look at the solutions. This approach fatally backfired, as I knew the ways to solve questions but always missed out on 1 or 2-minute details which in turn made it impossible to get the correct answer in many questions.
Learning: Whatever topics that you, do it perfectly, with a great practise.
2. Spending more time on Certain Topics and Tough Questions:
Certain topics like Numbers, Geometry used to dominate CAT 5-6 years earlier which in turn led to aspirants directing their sole focus on these 2 topics. In last 2-3 years, topics like Arithmetic have witnessed greater share in the number of questions. So as an aspirant, I went on to fall for the hype and spent the majority of my preparation time on Numbers and Geometry while totally ignoring Modern Math. Result: I could not solve Arithmetic and Modern Math with speed and accuracy.
There is also a tendency to practice questions which are really tough, again due to the historic impression of CAT. During whatever practice I did, my focus was always on tough and complex questions whereas quant questions in CAT 2015 which I attempted were fairly easy and needed speed. The result: I couldn’t attempt questions despite the fact that they were easy, as my mind was conditioned to solve really tough questions.
Learning: Spend equal time on all the topics and don’t focus only on tough questions when game is about speed.
3. The Hype:
This point doesn’t come from my personal experience but from a friend whose scores are total opposite to mine. This friend of mine had close to 99%ile in Quant whereas he didn’t do that good in other sections.
So how did this happen? He spent a significant amount of his preparation efforts working on just Quant. For a lot of people, CAT is about only Quant, I don’t know the exact reason but an honest guess says, it may be due to the hype created because of the historic difficulty level.
Aspirants need to realise that each of the 3 section carries 33% weightage each and they can’t choose to ignore any of them. Some people are good in any one section and they keep on practising again and again over the time but only a balanced score in other 2 would fetch calls from Top 10. One more downside of the hype is the performance pressure that it generates.
3.5: Use of on-screen calculator:
Honestly, this isn’t an independent mistake to be given a separate point but not small enough to be ignored. So, as per ancient CAT gyan, you must know shortcuts to calculations inorder to ace quant. But in the modern times, CAT paper has an onscreen calculator and it is fairly easy to use, if one has practised.
I ended up spending much more time doing things manually and mentally, while I had a TCS designed test software which could have done those calculations for me way easily. When you need to do a question in 105 seconds, every second saved can make a difference.
Everybody has their own unique set of mistakes, they may be similar to my 3.5 mistakes or maybe not, end goal is to score good by leveraging strengths and minimising the impact of limitations that we already know of.
Comments
Abhinav Vashisth
At what percentile, you got IMT ghaziabad?
7 Sep 2017, 02.31 PM
+Read Replies (1)
Sachin Mandot
Sachin Mandot is an IMT-G Alum (Batch of 2018). With an aim to help MBA aspirants, he has been writing on InsideIIM platform since March 2017.
During admissions 2016, cutoff for IMT was 90%ile in CAT. My point in the article was that i could have got better calls if my quant score was decent.
7 Sep 2017, 02.55 PM |
Avneetpal singh Khosa
Management aspirant and engineer by profession
Same is the case here Engineer with pathetic quants althought i score 91/100 in CBSE 12th boards but that isnt paying any rewards till yet could you please suggest some strategies for RC's i am not able to attempt much and also accuracy is not good
9 Sep 2017, 12.15 PM
+Read Replies (1)
Sachin Mandot
Sachin Mandot is an IMT-G Alum (Batch of 2018). With an aim to help MBA aspirants, he has been writing on InsideIIM platform since March 2017.
Thanks Avneet, We have a cultural tendency to over generalize things. Please go through this link for RC prep https://insideiim.com/3-way-improve-reading-comprehension-score-cat/
10 Sep 2017, 04.34 PM |
Jolly Mongia
Please share your advice for Verbal section preparation for 99 percentile score in it.
9 Sep 2017, 12.23 PM
+Read Replies (1)
Sachin Mandot
Sachin Mandot is an IMT-G Alum (Batch of 2018). With an aim to help MBA aspirants, he has been writing on InsideIIM platform since March 2017.
Hey Jolly, I have written an article for RC prep, please go through it here: https://insideiim.com/3-way-improve-reading-comprehension-score-cat/
10 Sep 2017, 04.35 PM |
Jaydeep Gupta
People here are really good at writing
10 Sep 2017, 09.40 AM
+Read Replies (1)
Sachin Mandot
Sachin Mandot is an IMT-G Alum (Batch of 2018). With an aim to help MBA aspirants, he has been writing on InsideIIM platform since March 2017.
Thank you Jaydeep!
10 Sep 2017, 04.36 PM |
Ruchita panchal
Ty bro for such kind suggestions,help as well as reminder,
21 Nov 2017, 11.57 PM