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GMAT Test Information
What
is GMAT?
The
Graduate Management Admission Test is a Standardized test that measures verbal,
mathematical and analytical writing skills. It is intended to help the graduate
schools of business assess the potential of applicants for advanced study in
business and management. Nearly 900 management institutes all over the world
(almost all of them in the US) require GMAT scores from each applicant. The GMAT
tests the fundamental skills - Reasoning and Comprehension included - and does
not require any subject-specific theoretical study.
The
test is designed in such a way that it would be unlike any other test you would
have taken at school or college. First, the test has no question paper or answer
sheets, nor does it have the same set of questions for all the examinees.
Further, it does not give you the option of not answering a question (unless, of
course, you run out of time at the end). All this because the GMAT is now an
entirely Computer based test - the keyboard and mouse do the work of a pen or
pencil. The test is scored out of 800 (in multiples of 10), and most scores fall
in the range of 500-600. However, a score of even 800 is not unheard of!
The
GMAT test is only one of several parameters which the graduate schools look at
to determine the selection of an applicant. A high score alone does not
translate into an admission offer from a great school. But the test can be
looked upon as the first major hurdle to be cleared in the process of getting
admission into a B-school of your choice.
Who
administers the GMAT?
The
GMAT test is developed and administered by the US-based Pearson VUE under the
direction of the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC), a non-profit
organization of graduate business schools worldwide. This implies that Pearson
VUE conducts the test, and sends each examinee the score report. For the conduct
of the test, Pearson VUE has appointed testing centers in various countries.
When
is the GMAT held?
All-round-the-year.
Unlike other exams, you can choose your own date and time for taking the GMAT!
The test is administered in the above cities five-days-a-week (Monday through
Friday), twice-a-day. September to December is the high season for GMAT, so in
case you intend to take the test during this period, you need to register very
early (say 90 days in advance) to get a date of your choice. Otherwise,
registering at least 15 days in advance is mandatory. The GMAT test lasts
roughly four hours, and most centres offer two slots : 9 A.M. and 2 P.M.
Eligibility
and Fees
Anyone
and everyone is eligible for taking the GMAT - there are no restrictions based
on age or qualifications. The test scores are valid for five years, i.e., most
universities accept scores up to five years old. But it is always better if your
scores are recent (not older than 2 years).
The
fee to take the Graduate Management Admission Test® (GMAT) is US$250
worldwide.
Preferred
Forms of Payment
-
By
credit card
* Credit card (Visa®, MasterCard®, American Express®, or JCB®)
* Debit card (Visa® or MasterCard® only)
-
By
cashier’s check (mailed forms only)
-
By
money order (mailed forms only)
-
Personal
check (mailed forms only)
Payments
by check must be payable in U.S. dollars and drawn on banks located in the
United States.
All payments must be made in full, include the correct numeric and written fee
amount, have the appropriate signature(s), and be made payable to Pearson
VUE-GMAT.
Postdated
checks will not be accepted. The bank name and its location should be preprinted
on the face of the check. Taxes must be included where applicable and the
appointment date must be at least 10 calendar days after the check is received
to allow time for the check to clear.
By
sending a personal check, you are authorizing Pearson VUE, at its discretion, to
use the information on your check to make an electronic debit from your account
for the amount of your check; no additional amount will be withdrawn at that
time. You are also authorizing Pearson VUE to make an electronic debit from your
account of an additional service fee of US$20 in the event your check is
returned.
THE
GMAT-CAT
In a
computer-adaptive test, the computer screen displays one question at a time,
which is chosen from a very large pool of questions categorized by content and
difficulty. The first question is always of a medium difficulty, and each
subsequent question is determined by your responses to all the previous
questions. In other words, the CAT adjusts itself to your ability level -
you’ll get few questions that are either too easy or too difficult for you.
Each
question in the GMAT CAT has five answer options, and you are required to select
one of these five as the correct answer by clicking on it. A subsequent question
is displayed on the screen only after you have answered the previous question,
so you cannot skip a question. You cannot also go back to a previously answered
question to change your answer. Thus, if you guess a correct answer or answer a
question incorrectly by mistake, your answers to subsequent questions will lead
you back to questions that are at the appropriate level of difficulty for you.
Content
and Format of the GMAT Test
The
test has three distinct sections : Analytical Writing Ability (AWA),
Quantitative, and Verbal. The Quantitative section has two types of questions,
Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency, mingled throughout the section. The Verbal
Section has three types : Sentence Correction, Critical Reasoning, and Reading
Comprehension; here too, the questions of each type appear in no set sequence.
There are a total of 78 questions, 37 in Quantitative and 41 in Verbal. These
have to be done in 75 minutes each.
The
following table gives out the format of the GMAT-CAT :
|
|
Questions
|
Timing
|
|
Computer
Tutorial
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NA
|
NA
|
|
Analysis of an Issue
Analysis of an Argument
|
1
Topic
1 Topic
|
30
min.
30 min.
|
|
Optional
Rest Break
|
NA
|
5
min.
|
|
Quantitative
(Problem Solving & Data Sufficiency)
|
37
|
75
min.
|
|
Optional
Rest Break
|
NA
|
5
min.
|
|
Verbal
(Reading Comprehension, Critical Reasoning, & Sentence Correction)
|
41
|
75
min.
|
|
|
78+2
Essays>
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4hrs.(approx.)
|
The
tutorial is meant to make you feel comfortable with the infrastructure and the
environment and does not have a prescribed time limit. You are expected to be
through with it in 15 minutes or so : it makes sense to acclimatize yourself
fully with the setting even after you think you have understood how the system
works.
Analytical
Writing Assessment
The
analytical writing section requires you to write - or rather type - two short
essays in thirty minutes each. The first is the Analysis of an Issue, in which
you need to analyze the issue presented and explain your views on it. The second
essay is Analysis of an Argument, in which a given argument has to be critically
analyzed and evaluated.
For both the essays, the emphasis is on the "Analytical" part, and not
on the "Writing" part. This implies that a concise essay with
well-reasoned points written in simple English will be looked upon more
favourably than an essay which falls short on the analytical aspects even though
it is high on writing skills.
A five-minute break follows the two essays. The computer gives you the option to
take this break, or to move directly to the subsequent section. Even if you
finish the essays before the stipulated sixty minutes, the break will still be
of five minutes. It is advisable to utilize this break by gearing yourself up
for the tougher sections that follow.
Quantitative
Section
The
37 questions in this section comprise two kinds of questions : Problem Solving
(PS) and Data Sufficiency (DS). The two kinds do not have a definite break-up,
usually there are around 20 PS and 17 DS questions. The section tests you on a
level of Maths that is comparable to the level of Class 10 exams, with questions
on Number Systems, Percentages, Fractions & Decimals, Algebra (including
Quadratic Equations), Geometry (including Basic Coordinate Geometry), Ratio
& Proportion, Area & Volume of 2-D and 3-D figures, and Probability.
This list is not exhaustive; questions from beyond these topics may also be
asked.
While the Problem Solving questions require you to solve a mathematical problem
directly and choose the right answer, the Data Sufficiency is of a trickier
variety. Each problem comprises a question followed by two statements, which may
or may not lead to the answer to the given question. This is what you need to
ascertain - whether the given statements can be used to answer the question or
not, and if so, whether the statements can be used independently or in
conjunction. Each of the five answer options present the five possibilities that
arise in this case, and you have to apply the basic principles of mathematics
with a strong dose of logic to get these right.
Verbal
Section
The
verbal section in GMAT test requires the basic skills of correct English coupled
with reasoning and analysis. The 41 questions, to be attempted in 75 minutes,
consist of three types : Sentence Correction (SC), Critical Reasoning (CR), and
Reading Comprehension (RC). The three types are intermingled, with no fixed
number for each type. The break-up of questions among SC, CR, and RC could be
14-14-13 or 15-13-13, or any such combination.
Reporting
the Scores
There
is a provision of reporting your GMAT test scores to a maximum of five
universities of your choice, the cost of which is built into the GMAT test fee
you pay. But the catch is : you have to select these five
universities/business-schools which will receive copies of your score report
BEFORE you begin to take the test. This implies that even before taking the GMAT,
you need to do some homework on which universities you’re finally going to
apply, based on the score that you expect to attain.
For
reporting to each additional university, the charge is US $28, payable by
an international credit card or a dollar denominated draft. You will incur taxes
when you request Additional Score Reports (ASRs) in certain countries. Please
click tax rates to determine the tax you will have to pay in certain countries.
The
Scoring Pattern in GMAT CAT
The
GMAT test results comprise four different scores : a total score (which is the
combined verbal and quantitative scores), a separate Verbal score, a separate
Quantitative score, and an Analytical Writing score. The total score is
reported on a scale from 200 to 800. The Verbal and Quantitative Scores
are reported on a scale of 0 to 60. For the AWA score, the scale is from 0 to 6.
Note that your AWA performance is not reflected in your total GMAT score
(on 800). You get to know your total, verbal, and quantitative score
immediately after taking the test. Official GMAT score reports, which include
the AWA scores, are mailed approximately two weeks after you take the test and
take another ten days or so to reach your address.
In
addition to these scores, the score report also contains percents (%) below.
These "% below" indicate the percentage of examinees who scored below
you based on the scores of the entire GMAT testing population for the most
recent three-year period. These percentages are important in considering how an
applicant for admission to a particular management school compares with everyone
in the specified period, with all other applicants to the same school, and with
students already enrolled at the school.
The
following table indicates the percentage of examinees tested from June 1995
through May 1998 who scored below specified total scores :
|
Score
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Percentage
Below
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Score
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Percentage
Below
|
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770-800
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Greater
than 99
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490
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40
|
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740-760
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99
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480
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37
|
|
730
|
98
|
470
|
34
|
|
720
|
97
|
460
|
30
|
|
710
|
96
|
450
|
28
|
|
700
|
95
|
440
|
25
|
|
690
|
94
|
430
|
23
|
|
680
|
93
|
420
|
20
|
|
670
|
91
|
410
|
18
|
|
660
|
90
|
400
|
15
|
|
650
|
88
|
390
|
13
|
|
640
|
85
|
380
|
12
|
|
630
|
83
|
370
|
10
|
|
620
|
81
|
360
|
8
|
|
610
|
78
|
350
|
7
|
|
600
|
75
|
340
|
6
|
|
590
|
73
|
330
|
5
|
|
580
|
70
|
320
|
4
|
|
570
|
67
|
310
|
3
|
|
560
|
64
|
300
|
2
|
|
550
|
60
|
290
|
2
|
|
540
|
57
|
240-280
|
1
|
|
530
|
53
|
200-230
|
<1
|
|
520
|
50
|
|
|
|
510
|
47
|
|
|
|
500
|
43
|
|
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No.
of examinees : 602,037
Mean Score : 513
This table implies that if you end up with a score of 600 on the GMAT, 75% of
the 602,037 examinees who took the GMAT between June 1995 and May 1998 got a
score below yours.
Retaking
the GMAT
Even
though an "I could have done better" feeling is inevitable after any
test, taking the GMAT again may not be helpful. Sometimes it is necessary to
take the GMAT test more than once, like when a management school asks you
for more recent scores than what you have. However, unless your scores seem
unusually low compared to your performance in the practice tests, or if you have
not been able to perform well because of a sudden illness or similar exceptional
circumstances, it’s advisable not to succumb to the temptation of repeating
the test. This is because, given the nature of the test, it is unlikely that
your scores can substantially improve.
If you repeat the test, your scores from the latest test date and the two most
recent test administrations in the last five years will be reported to the
institutions you designate as recipients. In any case, you cannot take the test
more than once in the same calendar month, even if you have taken the test and
cancelled your scores.
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