GMAT
The purpose of the GMAT(Graduate Management Admissions
Test) is to measure your ability to think systematically
and to employ the verbal and mathematical skills
that you have acquired throughout your years of
schooling.
We help you to master the exam by reviewing all
GMAT areas: essay writing, critical reasoning,
reading comprehension, sentence correction, problem
solving, and data sufficiency. You will also see
an overview of the new GMAT format, tips and strategies
to help you achieve your best score.
The
test consists of two multiple-choice sections
(Quantitative and Verbal) and an essay section
called the Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA).
The
test format:
Quantitative Section
37 questions
75 minutes
Problem Solving Questions (approx. 24 Questions)
Data Sufficiency Questions (approx. 13 Questions)
Verbal Section
41 questions
75 minutes
Reading Comprehension (approx. 14 Questions)
Sentence Correction (approx. 13 Questions)
Critical Reasoning (approx. 14 Questions)
Essay
Questions (Analytical Writing Assessment):
The GMAT CAT begins with the two AWA questions.
For each of these sections, you have thirty minutes
to type an essay into the computer using a simple
word-processing program. The essay sections are
administered first, but the Quantitative and Verbal
multiple-choice sections can appear in any order.