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GMAT Test Preparation

The Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT*) exam is a standardized exam used in admissions decisions by more than 5,200 graduate management programs worldwide. It helps you gauge, and demonstrate to schools, your academic potential for success in graduate level management studies.

Why Take The GMAT Exam

Quality graduate business programs rely on the GMAT to make admissions decisions, so if you’re serious about business school, then the GMAT is your best first step. Explore the reasons why taking the GMAT positions you for success in the classroom and in your career.

GMAT Overview

The four-part exam measures your Analytical Writing, Verbal, Quantitative, and Integrated Reasoning skills—higher-order reasoning skills that management faculty worldwide have identified as important for incoming students to have. Your GMAT scores provide a standardized, statistically reliable measure of how you are likely to perform academically in the core curriculum of a graduate management program.

Launched in 1954 by a group of nine business schools to provide a uniform measure of the academic skills needed to succeed in their programs, the GMAT exam is now used by more than 5,200 graduate management programs at approximately 1,900 institutions worldwide. Thus, if you want to join a prestigious Business school, you need to take GMAT most of the times.

The GMAT exam is delivered entirely in English and solely on computer. It is not a test of business knowledge, subject matter mastery, English vocabulary, or advanced computational skills.

Well, it is one of the measures, not the only measure for your selection. While it is surely an important component of your selection process, other factors, such as your academic performance, your work experience, your admission essays, your Statement of Purpose and many other factors are considered for your admission. However, your test score may be important for the very consideration of other factors. Thus, you cannot ignore this score.

The GMAT is presented on a computer in the form of a Computer Adaptive Test. This means that the computer changes or ‘adapts’ to your performance and present questions and generate scores basing on your performance.

The format of the GMAT is as given below.

# Questions Timing
1 Analytical writing
Analysis of an Arguement
1 30 minutes
2 Integrated Reasoning
Multi-Source Reasoning
Table Analysis
Graphics Interpretation
two-Parts Analysis
12 30 minutes
3 Operational Break
4 Quantitative
Problem Solving
Data Sufficiency
37 75 minutes
3 Operational Break
5 Verbal
Reading Comprehension
Critical Reasoning
Sentence Correction
41 75 Minutes

Study GMAT