hyoeun87
EMPOWERgmat makes a point that there are up to 19 questions on GMAT that will not affect the score. These questions are typically hard and complex questions.
Does anyone know how to determine these questions? Any pattern or type of questions that have been repeatedly showing in real GMAT tests?
Any examples or specific tactics would be much appreciated!
First understand why there are experimental questions:
Item Response Theory incorporates three metrics for each “item” (or “question” or “problem”): the B parameter is the closest measurement to pure “difficulty”. The C parameter is essentially a measure of likelihood that a correct answer can be guessed. And the A parameter tells the scoring system how much to weight that item. How are these three parameters assigned to each item?
In order to know what those A, B, and C parameters are, the GMAT has to test its new questions on a variety of users. So on each section, several problems just won’t count — they’re only there for research. (e.g. if many 750 scorers answer a particular experimental item incorrectly, it is likely that it has very high difficulty level and will be assigned the B parameter accordingly)
The research will be successful only if the participants do not know which questions are experimental and give their best on each.
Hence, there is absolutely no way of knowing which questions will count and which won't - GMAC ensures that.
For more details on GMAT scoring, check:
https://www.gmatclub.com/forum/veritas-prep-resource-links-no-longer-available-399979.html#/2015/07 ... mat-score/