Why Take the GMAT Test?
GMAT scores are used by admissions officers in roughly 1,800
graduate business and management programs worldwide. Schools that require
prospective students to submit GMAT scores in the application process are
generally interested in admitting the best-qualified applicants for their programs,
which means that you may find a more beneficial learning environment at schools
that require GMAT scores as part of your application. Because the GMAT test
gauges skills that are important to successful study of business and management
at the graduate level, your scores will give you a good indication of how well
prepared you are to succeed academically in a graduate management program; how
well you do on the test may also help you choose the business schools to which
you apply. Furthermore, the percentile table you receive with your scores will
tell you how your performance on the test compares to the performance of other
test takers, giving you one way to gauge your competition for admission to business
school.
Schools consider many different aspects of an application
before making an admissions decision, so even if you score well on the GMAT
test, you should contact the schools that interest you to learn more about them
and to ask about how they use GMAT scores and other admissions criteria (such as
your undergraduate grades, essays, and letters of recommendation) to evaluate
candidates for admission. School admissions offices, school Web sites, and
materials published by the school are the best sources for you to tap when you
are doing research about where you might want to go to business school.
For more information about how schools should use GMAT
scores in admissions decisions, please read Appendix A of this book. For more
information on the GMAT, registering to take the test, sending your scores to
schools, and applying to business school, please visit our Web site at
www.mba.com.
GMAT Test Format
The GMAT test consists of four separately timed sections
(see the table on the next page). You start the test with two 30-minute
Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA) questions that require you to type your
responses using the computer keyboard. The writing section is followed by two
75-minute, multiple-choice sections: the Quantitative and Verbal sections of
the test. The GMAT is a computer-adaptive test (CAT), which means that in the
multiple-choice sections of the test, the computer constantly gauges how well
you are doing on the test and presents you with questions that are appropriate
to your ability level. These questions are drawn from a huge pool of possible
test questions. So, although we talk about the GMAT as one test, the GMAT test
you take may be completely different from the test of the person sitting next
to you. Here’s how it works. At the start of each GMAT multiple-choice section
(Verbal and Quantitative), you will be presented with a question of moderate difficulty.
The computer uses your response to that first question to determine which
question to present next. If you respond correctly, the test usually will give
you questions of increasing difficulty. If you respond incorrectly, the next question
you see usually will be easier than the one you answered incorrectly. As you
continue to respond to the questions presented, the computer will narrow your
score to the number that best characterizes your ability. When you complete each
section, the computer will have an accurate assessment of your ability.
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