Thanks for the tips. May I ask what your score was? I’m guessing not bad if you 
got into Emory!

 

My math couldn’t suck more. I was an English major, so I only took one or two 
basic math courses in college. And it has been quite some time since I was in 
high school, so I don’t remember that stuff.

 

I’ve got 3 books I’m working through now—Kaplan, Princeton, and the Official 
Guide. On my lunch break, I ordered two more math-only books with lots of 
sample questions and explanations of the solutions. I want to keep hammering 
away until I can do them in my sleep. My understanding is that the math isn’t 
particularly complex, but that the harder questions consist of multiple layers 
of simpler math.

 

Of course, “simpler math” is a relative term. To an English major, there’s not 
much math that’s simple!

 

 

 

John

 

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lenny Bensman
Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 12:35 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: GMAT

 

I'm doing my MBA right now at Emory - took GMAT 2 years ago.

 

In taking GMAT, a good part of your success depends on knowing the strategy, 
apart from knowing the material.  The tests are now CATs (Computer 
Aided/Assisted Testing), that works differently from the paper version:  
answering the first question right and answering the second question wrong is 
not equivalent to answering the first question wrong and the second question 
right.  The reason being is that CAT algorithm is written to hone in on your 
score rather than derive it from fixed data.  That is, it uses answer from the 
previous question to select current question.  If you answer incorrectly, your 
score is dropped, and an easier question is given.  Likewise, if you answer 
correctly, your score is raised, and harder question is selected.  Hence, first 
questions make big influence on your score while later ones are simply 
fine-tuning it.  Therefore, your time management shouldn't be linear, with more 
time spent on earlier questions to make sure you get those right, and less time 
spent on last questions since those have less and not as profound effect on 
your score as the earlier ones.  Etc., etc., etc., so be sure to use training 
material that addresses CAT strategy and not the classic GMAT - this is the 
most influential preparation part that you can do to better your scores.

 

As far as math, <opinion>as sad as it is</opinion> you're not really tested on 
being able to infer or apply logic to a given problem, but rather knowing the 
shortcuts.  AFAIR, only couple of questions were truly creative that required 
application of your logic skills.  Most were about knowing shortcuts, 
remembering certain properties (like lengths of sides of a triangle based on 
angles), and the likes.  So be sure to get that toolbox before going in for the 
real test.

 

And be sure to practice the exam on the computer with available simulation 
software (I've had access to couple of packages - scores were pretty close to 
what I eventually got on my GMAT, but each package had a systematic bias in 
their scoring:  one was consistently higher than the other) so that you're 
familiar with it when taking the exam.

 

Lenny

 

On 3/5/08, John Hornbuckle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

A while back, we had a discussion here about certification vs. degrees.
I opined that it was best to get degrees--which are good forever and not
tied solely to the tech field--first, then go for certs after that.

Well, I'm taking my own advice and going back to school for a Master's
in Management Information Systems. On May 3rd I take the GMAT, for which
I'm spending a couple of hours studying every day (longer on weekends).

If any of you have taken it, I'd be glad to receive any advice/wisdom
you could offer...




John Hornbuckle
MIS Department
Taylor County School District
318 North Clark Street
Perry, FL 32347

www.taylor.k12.fl.us



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