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THE GMAT. What is the GMAT and how is it used? What does the test involve? How can you best prepare?. Part One. What is the GMAT and how is it used?. The basics. What GMAT means How the GMAT may be used b y schools one of several metrics test of character b y you a pplication CV
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THE GMAT • What is the GMAT and how is it used? • What does the test involve? • How can you best prepare?
Part One What is the GMAT and how is it used?
The basics • What GMAT means • How the GMAT may be used • by schools • one of several metrics • test of character • by you • application • CV • learning
Part Two What does the test involve?
Test overview • Essay (AWA) ~ 30 minutes • Integrated Reasoning ~ 30 minutes • 8 minute break • Quant ~ 75 minutes • 8 minute break • Verbal ~ 75 minutes
The less important bits 1 • Analytical Writing Assessment • importance • how to ace it • template • keep it simple • be clear & concise • preparation • planning • timing • plan, write, review
The less important bits 2 • IntegratedReasoning • importance • according to GMAC • according to schools & tutors • preparation • question types • synthesising information • timing • all multiple choice
The less important bits 3 • Do • stay calm ~ you know what to expect • keep it simple (AWA) • do what you can (IR) • Don’t • take them too seriously • show off (AWA) • worry about getting everything right (IR)
Your mission in the first hour is… Be freshand focused for Quant and Verbal!
Quant overview • 37 questions • almost exactly 2 mins per question made up of… • 22 Problem Solving (normal Maths) • 15 Data Sufficiency • same theory, different format
Verbal overview • 41 questions • a little less than 2 mins per question • Sentence Correction • correcting grammar and style • Critical Reasoning • a question about an argument • Reading Comprehension • what it sounds like
N.B. • In both sections, question types are mixed up • All questions are multiple choice (A-E)
Problem Solving 1 The two big areas of theory are.. Number Properties and Algebra
Problem Solving 2 Other reasonably important areas are.. Fractions & Percentages Powers & Roots Statistics Rate & Ratio Geometry
Problem Solving 3 And finally, don’t worry too much about.. Sequences Venn diagrams Coordinate geometry Functions Probability Combinatorics Symbolism
Data Sufficiency 1 • Requires same theory as Problem Solving • You are asked a question • You are given statements (1) and (2) • You decide whether the statements give sufficient information to answer the question
Data Sufficiency 2 “What is the value?” questions Example What is the value of x + y? • x = 3 and y = 5 • a = 2 and b = 1 We can answer with (1) but not with (2)
Data Sufficiency 3 A similar example What is the value of x + y? • x = 7 • y = 11 We need both statements together to answer the question; one statement on its own is not enough
Data Sufficiency 4 Yes / No questions Example Is x a prime number? • 6 < x < 8 • x has two factors Got an answer?
Data Sufficiency 5 Either statement on its own is sufficient to know that the answer is Yes
N.B. If a statement (or statements) is sufficient to give a definite answer of NO, that’s ok too
Sentence Correction 1 Theory required: Rules of (old-fashioned, formal,written) English grammar AND An understanding of (good) style in written English
Sentence Correction 2 Format: • You are given a sentence, some or all of which is underlined • You must replace the underlined portion with one of five options • Answer choice A is always the same, i.e. the sentence is correct as it stands
Critical Reasoning 1 Format: • You are given an argument. Arguments may contain the following: • Premise (fact) • Assumption • Conclusion (opinion) • You get a question on that argument • multiple choice answers
Critical Reasoning 2 Sample questions: • What would strengthen/weaken the argument? • On what assumption is the argument based? • What would help us to better evaluate the argument?
Reading Comprehension 1 Format: • You are given a passage of ~350 words • Any topic ~ no outside knowledge needed • You answer 3 (or sometimes 4) multiple choice questions
Reading Comprehension 2 Sample questions: • What is the primary purpose of this passage? • The author would most likely agree with which of the following statements? • Theory A differs from Theory B on which of the following points?
Part Three How can you best prepare?
What To Do 1 Quant first steps • Learn the theory • Use a Maths book • Do one topic at a time • Practise processes until they become automatic
What To Do 2 OG questions • Start with the lower-numbered questions in each section as they’re easier (supposedly) • Work out what you don’t know, or can’t do, and then fix it
How To Do It 1 When you sit down to study, HAVE A LEARNING OBJECTIVE Never an amount of questions Never a set time By the end of this session… What do I want to have achieved? I want to be better at….. what?
How To Do It 2 When going through the OG, DO EACH QUESTION (AT LEAST) 3 TIMES 1. Test conditions 2. Long as you like 3. Review (later)
How To Do It 3 REVIEW EVERYTHING! (especially when you’re tired after work ~ save new questions for when you’re fresher) FIND YOUR WEAKNESSES
Fixing it 1 I didn’t know what to do =( • Look for clues • Keywords • Answer choices • Compare similar questions
Fixing it 2 It took too long =( • Practise processes • Learn to read questions (clues / similar questions) • Find shortcuts • Just get the answer however you can!
Fixing it 3 I don’t understand this topic very well =( • Go back to basics • Work on one topic at a time • Practise until you do understand • Ask for help
Fixing it 4 I made a silly mistake =( • Work out why • copying error • going too quickly • messy working • misread the question • Always re-read the question!
Top tips 1 Have a timing strategy • Time as an investment ~ ROI • Faster and slower ~ what difference does it make?
Top tips 2 Use the answer choices • Issues • Similarities and differences • Clues, common elements
Top tips 3 Learn to eliminate wrong answers
Problem Solving skills • Multiplication and division • Prime factorisation • Identifying number properties • Deriving algebraic equations • Solving algebraic equations • Applying formulae • Reading the question
Data Sufficiency skills • Being methodical • Finding a method that works for you
Sentence Correction skills • Applying rules of grammar • Spotting small differences • Developing an instinct for the sound of a sentence • Giving reasons why things that sound wrong are wrong
Critical Reasoning skills • Simplifying an argument • line of reasoning • Identifying premises, assumptions, conclusions, inferences etc. • Knowing what is ‘outside the scope’ • Clarifying the two sides of an argument • double negatives
Reading Comprehension skills • Speed reading • Summarising • Mind-mapping or other note-taking • descriptive vs argumentative • Identifying keywords • Recognising synonyms
Resources • GCSE level Maths book • The Official Guide to GMAT Review • A book on English grammar and style • mba.com free software • Other online resources e.g. khanacademy.org
More fun ways to prepare • Sudoku • Spot the difference • Crosswords • Card games • Philosophy • Old newspaper reports • Numbers in everyday life
Deliberate mistake 1 Is x a prime number? (2) x has two factors Statement (2) is the definition of a prime number, therefore statement (2) is sufficient BUT…
Deliberate mistake 2 Is x a prime number? (1) 6 < x < 8 x does not have to be an integer, therefore statement (1) is NOT sufficient