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GMAT
Overview
What's GMAT?
Graduate Management Admission Test. The GMAT is required for admission to
business school. This computerized test is offered year-round, but only in the
last 3 weeks of every calendar month. It tests students on verbal skills,
quantitative skills (math) and analytical writing skills
About the GMAT (Graduate Management Aptitude Test)
The GMAT is only available as a computer adaptive test (CAT) that adapts to your
performance as you take the test. The test is no longer available as a paper and
pencil exam.
The GMAT Test is a multiple-choice test that most business schools use for
admission into their graduate programs.
The Graduate Management Admission TestŪ (GMATŪ) consists of three main parts,
the Analytical Writing Assessment, Quantitative section, and Verbal section.
Analytical Writing Assessment (30 + 30 mins = 1 hour)
The GMAT begins with the Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA). The AWA consists
of two separate writing tasks. Analysis of an Issue and Analysis of an Argument.
Test takers are allowed 30 minutes to complete each essay.
Quantitative Section (37 questions; 75 minutes)
The AWA is followed by an optional five-minute break, hich is followed by the
Quantitative section of the GMAT. This section contains 37 multiple-choice
questions of two question types
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Data Sufficiency and
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Problem Solving.
Test takers are allowed a maximum of 75 minutes to complete the entire section.
Verbal Section(41 questions; 75 minutes)
After a second optional five-minute break, the Verbal Section of the GMAT
begins. This section contains 41 multiple-choice questions of three question
types
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Reading Comprehension
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Critical Reasoning and
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Sentence Correction.
Test takers are allowed a maximum of 75 minutes to complete the entire section.
GMAT Scoring Pattern
The Graduate Management Admission TestŪ (GMATŪ) yields four scores
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Verbal (Scores range from 0 to 60)
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Quantitative (Scores range from 0 to 60)
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Total (Scores range from 200 to 800) and
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Analytical Writing Assessment (Scores range from 0 to 6 in half-point
intervals).
Each of these scores is reported on a fixed scale and will appear on the
official GMAT score reports that you and your designated score recipients
(schools) receive.
Scores below 9 and above 44 for the Verbal section or below 7 and above 50 for
the Quantitative section are rare. Both scores are on a fixed scale and can be
compared across any GMAT administration. And two-thirds of test takers score
between 400 and 600.
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