bito94 wrote:
Hi everyone, this is the first time I write on this forum.
I am writing because I saw in the topic called " GMAT Prep Software Analysis and What If Scenarios" that it is possible to take 50 at the quantitative section making wrong all the last 10 questions. This really struck me because I had worse scores doing 6 or 7 errors so I would like to know what could be the reason of my scores.
I report the results of my tests:
1° Princeton Review: Q44-31/37 (I made wrong n°: 9-10-22-26 (Exp) - 28 -32)
2° Princeton Review: Q47-30/37 (I made wrong n°: 14-18-21-23 (Exp) - 28 (Exp) - 29 -36)
3° Gmatpill: Q47-30/36 (I made wrong n°: 1-8-11-13-16-24 and didn't answer to 37)
Are these results reliable? Is it normal that the first question at gmatpill was about combination/permutation (level 500)?
Thanks
bito94 -
While it may be possible to score a 50 on the Quantitative section with getting the final 10 questions wrong, it is not likely. Keep in mind that there are experimental questions on the actual GMAT exam and that these questions do not factor into your score In fact, anywhere from 10 - 12 of the Quant questions could be experimental. So, ifyour final 10 questions were all experimental and you got each incorrect, you could score a 50. As for you final question, about the combination/permutation question being first, it may not be normal but it is conceivable. Your first question will be basically a question at the 50th percentile, so a combination/permutation question could fit the bill.
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