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Detailed Overview of the GMAT
GMAT
stands for Graduate Management Admission Test. This standardized
test is required for admission at over 1000 business schools worldwide.
GMAT scores have proven to be a reliable measure of some developed
skills that are important in business studies at the graduate level.
Business schools use GMAT scores to objectively compare applicants,
and to predict how those students will perform in their graduate
business program (at least in the first year). Although your GMAT
score is only one portion of your application, it’s often
used to reduce the size of the applicant pool and is the single
factor that all business school applicants will have in common.
A high score will almost guarantee you acceptance in a lower-ranked
school, as well as serious consideration at a higher ranked school
(especially if you have some work experience). A high score might
also mean a scholarship or an internship in fields that use GMAT
scores as a way to field applicants.
According to the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC), the
makers of the test, "The GMAT® exam measures basic verbal,
mathematical, and analytical writing skills that you have developed
over a long period of time in your education and work. It does NOT
measure your knowledge of business, your job skills, specific content
in your undergraduate or first university course work, or your abilities
in any other specific subject area.”
The test is administered using Computer-Adaptive Testing (CAT),
as opposed to a paper-and-pencil test. There are many features of
CAT that are different from paper-and-pencil testing, but the test
is calibrated so that test-takers should receive approximately the
same score using CAT as they would taking a paper-and-pencil test.
The paper test was offered overseas, but that has become obsolete
with Pearson VUE taking over as administrators.
The GMAT is given in English, and consists of the following four
separately timed sections: Two Analytical Writing tasks (AW), Quantitative
(math), and Verbal. The AW section is always first, followed by
Quantitative and then Verbal. An optional break of 5 minutes is
allowed between each section.
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Analytical Writing Assessment
2 essays, 30 minutes each; one essay asks for an analysis of an
issue, the other asks for an analysis of an argument.
- Quantitative
Section
37 multiple-choice questions, 75 minutes; two question types:
Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency
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Verbal Section
41 multiple-choice questions, 75 minutes; three question types:
Reading Comprehension, Critical Reasoning, and Sentence Correction.
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