Time. It is the most precious commodity. Time impacts everything we do. It is also very often the reason behind the things we do not do. Busy people trying to work GMAT prep into extremely hectic schedules can be phenomenally difficult. All too frequently, studying for the GMAT becomes seemingly impossible.
As a GMAT instructor, I’ve heard on more than a few instances that my students have used their vacation time to study. Most recently, a tutor student of mine cashed in three full weeks and devoted all of it to GMAT prep. Day in, day out—the GMAT was his “off” time. Wouldn’t it be nice to have even one day off from work to focus on the GMAT? Good news for your advisees: they have several coming up over the next six or seven weeks.
The end of November and the month of December yield several days of (sometimes paid) holiday vacation. Traditionally, folks have likely spent that time with over-full bellies watching sports and movies on television between naps. Trust that it is not my intention to disparage such holiday traditions. However, there’s always next year.
To get folks warmed up and committed to daily GMAT prep, Kaplan offers a fun way to keep the test on students’ minds until Turkey Day and the rest of the holiday season trots by. It takes a quick moment to sign up for Kaplan’s Free GMAT Question of the Day.
Our question-a-day will send a different GMAT question every day to a provided email address. The questions run the gamut in terms of type, content, and format. Upon submitting an answer, participants gain access to a detailed breakdown of the question including a description of the most efficient, strategic way to solve and a discussion of each answer choice outlining why one is right and the other four are wrong.
Please send the link out to everyone who might benefit. Oh, and Happy Holidays!