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Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4448
Own Kudos [?]: 28569 [0]
Given Kudos: 130
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4448
Own Kudos [?]: 28569 [0]
Given Kudos: 130
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4448
Own Kudos [?]: 28569 [0]
Given Kudos: 130
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4448
Own Kudos [?]: 28569 [0]
Given Kudos: 130
GMAT Score for University of Michigan MBA (Ross) [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: GMAT Score for University of Michigan MBA (Ross)
The University of Michigan Ross School of Business is a top ranked establishment that offers five MBAs, each geared towards students in various levels of their careers. In this post, we’ll be discussing their most popular degree—the full-time MBA—including information on the curriculum, application process, and the average University of Michigan GMAT score needed for this esteemed program.


Photo by MichiganRoss

University of Michigan MBA Curriculum
First year University of Michigan MBA students will commence their studies by focusing on a core curriculum based upon accounting, economics, statistics, strategy, management, marketing, and leadership courses.

At the end of year one, Ross students will undertake the signature Multidisciplinary Action Project (MAP). During the MAP, teams of students will work together for seven weeks to solve a specific problem at a nonprofit, corporation, or public organization. At the end of the class, teams will present their ideas to the executives of the selected company.

Second year students will focus on elective courses, allowing for career specializations in areas like social enterprise, real estate, healthcare, entrepreneurial management, or environmentally sustainable business.

During their final term, students are encouraged to spend a full semester or half-semester studying abroad at partner schools in Europe, South America, or China.

After completing the MBA program, 98% of Ross graduates receive a job offer within three months.

University of Michigan MBA Application Process
The Ross Business School accepts applications in three rounds throughout the year. Exact dates vary year to year, but the Round 1 deadline is typically in early October, Round 2 in early January, and Round 3 in mid-March.

Applicants are expected to complete the following steps:

  • Submit official undergraduate and graduate transcripts (a U.S. bachelor’s degree or its equivalent is required)
  • Submit GMAT or GRE scores
  • Submit a current resume that reflects your professional working experience
  • Write two required essays (both up to 300 words) and an optional statement
  • Submit one letter of recommendation (preferably from a current or former manager)
  • Complete an interview (either on campus or with a Ross alum off-site)
  • Participate in an optional team exercise
  • If applicable, submit a TOEFL score of 100 or higher, or a PTE score of 70 or higher. International students with degrees from accredited institutions where the sole language of instruction is English are exempt.
  • Pay a $200 application fee (waived for current/former US military members, and those who have served in the Peace Corps, AmeriCorps, or Teach for America within the past three years)
Ross School of Business Rankings
The internationally acclaimed Ross School consistently ranks in the top 15 U.S. programs, and top 25 international programs. See selected rankings below:

University of Michigan MBA U.S. Rankings

Bloomberg12th

The Economist12th

U.S. News11th

Forbes12th

University of Michigan MBA International Rankings

The Economist12th

Financial Times23rd

University of Michigan GMAT Score and Stats
The average University of Michigan GMAT score for MBA students is 716. The range for the middle 80% is 670-760. The average GPA is 3.5.

The student cohort itself has a graduating class size of about 422. Admitted students have, on average, 5 years of work experience. Annual tuition is about $62,300 for Michigan residents, and $67,300 for non-residents.

With the Ross School’s acceptance rate of 25% is higher than almost all other American business schools ranked within the top 20 programs. Nevertheless, you’ll want to optimize your application to enhance your chances of acceptance.

If you’re determined to take the GMAT, you can begin the process by following these four simple steps:

The post GMAT Score for University of Michigan MBA (Ross) appeared first on Magoosh GMAT Blog.
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MBA Applicants: How to Get Accepted in 2018-19 [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: MBA Applicants: How to Get Accepted in 2018-19


It’s time for my annual harangue/plea/rant.

If you are planning to apply Round 1 in the fall, but have not yet thought about why you want an MBA, taken the GMAT/GRE, researched schools, or evaluated your qualifications, please please please keep reading. And then get started!

I would like to help you avoid the harried hassle and diminished application quality that accompanies rushed applications. Just to be clear: Rushed applications are started just a few weeks before the deadlines by applicants who cogitate, procrastinate, or just start thinking about applying late in the cycle. Instead, follow the example of those many applicants who start their applications months before applying and who work steadily to complete them by their deadlines.

Those people are getting started now.

My 20+ years in this business tell me that those who start the application process 9-12 months before they apply:

  • Get into more and “better” schools.
  • Are more likely to get scholarships.
  • Are more prepared for b-school when they arrive on campus.
They simply do better in the MBA application process than those who wait until the eleventh hour (or even the tenth).

Those better prepared applicants – they are your real competition. And the best way to compete is to start the race now.

Not tomorrow. Not next week or month or quarter. Now.

Start Your GMAT or GRE Prep
Once you determine that you have a goal that requires an MBA, start preparing for the GMAT or GRE. Don’t wait for the summer or “later.” Your test score is a critical element in your application. Choosing schools without knowing that number leads to all kinds of aggravation, stress, and unpleasant surprises.

Every year I get calls, emails, and comments from applicants who bombed the GRE or the GMAT and don’t have time to retake it. They are torn between applying to the programs they really want to attend but where their test score (and perhaps other elements) are less than competitive, and applying to programs where they are competitive but where they aren’t dying to go.

It’s a dilemma you can avoid by allowing yourself the time to retake the GRE/GMAT, if necessary.

Lower than expected test scores can throw a major monkey wrench in your plans when you take the test within two months of your target deadlines. However, if you bomb it in the spring, you will still have months to prepare again and retake the exam before the deadlines – even the first round deadlines.

Where to Apply: Dartboard vs. Intent
And then there are the applicants who don’t understand the importance of fit in the application process. They just know they want an MBA from a Top X-ranked school. They may or may not have a specific goal or reason to pursue an MBA, and they really could just as easily be throwing darts at a list of schools to determine where to invest their time and money.

Or maybe they just started too late to do the research and reflection that they could’ve and should’ve done had they started earlier. Like now.

In any case, this superficial approach could lead to rejection, a very expensive mistake, or a less than optimal MBA experience.

Apply purposefully to specific programs that support your goals and at which you are competitive. Don’t apply to rankings. You won’t attend rankings. You’ll attend a graduate business school.

Writing is Rewriting & Requires Time
Some of you know why you want an MBA, have good reasons for selecting the school you will apply to, and will get the GMAT or GRE score that you want the first time you take the exam; so you may be feeling a little smug. Okay, so you got the first part of the application process done. Fantastic!

However, if you slack off and wait for the last minute to complete your applications, you will end up hurrying the writing process for your essays, short answer questions, and resume, or the practice/filming process for video options on your application. Either way, you will end up rushing.

Bad idea. And bad ideas lead to bad results.

Writing – whether long essays, short essays, scripts, activity descriptions, or resumes – benefits from time. Temporal distance between revisions improves critical analysis and editing. In contrast, scrambling to slap something together leads to sloppy thinking and writing.

Getting the GMAT or GRE out of the way, thinking profoundly about fit, and starting your essays early are all important steps, but you can’t just assume that ticking items off your checklist will get you into b-school. You need something more comprehensive than that…

A Holistic, Purposeful Approach to the MBA Application Process
Now is the time to proceed purposefully, methodically, and thoughtfully so that you submit a superior MBA application to the most appropriate schools at the most desirable deadline for you.

I’m going to help you keep this one by laying out the process holistically from January through September so that you can present a superior application. It’s not just the test score or the GPA or the years of work experience or solid extracurriculars. It’s all of the above.

I’ve mapped out the process for you here.

Click here to view full size

If you are aiming for the Round 1 deadlines, you can download the PDF, print it, and tape it on your mirror, wall, fridge, or wherever you’ll regularly see it. Alternatively we have created a public Google doc that you can copy and paste and modify to suit your needs. Then using the timeline as a guide, add the above tasks to your calendar. And do them.

If you follow this MBA timeline, your MBA dreams will not be a mad, breathless sprint to the finish line, but a long, steady jog that allows you to successfully complete the MBA application marathon.

You are unique, whether you realize it or not, and our expert MBA admissions consultants can help you identify your individuality and highlight it in your applications. Check out our MBA Admissions Consulting Services to learn how we can help you stand out from the crowd and get accepted to business school!

This article was originally posted on Accepted’s Admissions Blog.

The post MBA Applicants: How to Get Accepted in 2018-19 appeared first on Magoosh GMAT Blog.
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The GMAT Gets Shorter! [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: The GMAT Gets Shorter!
GMAC, the brilliant folks who create the GMAT, have decided to shorten the length of the GMAT exam. Starting on April 16, 2018, there will be six fewer Quant questions and five fewer Verbal questions on the GMAT. (Clearly, they’ve decided that “less is more”!) Here’s our summary of what’s changing and how it affects you, but you can also read GMAC’s FAQ on the most recent changes.

What’s changing on the GMAT
  • For several years and up until this writing, the GMAT Quant section has had 37 questions and has taken a full 75 minutes. Starting April 16th, the Quant section will have 31 questions and will take 62 minutes.

     
  • Similarly, in recent memory, the GMAT Verbal section has had 41 questions and has taken a full 75 minutes. Starting April 16th, the Verbal section will have 36 questions and will take 65 minutes.
Notice that the combined effect of these changes is to shave 23 minutes off the total exam time. These changes, while a breath of fresh air, do not really indicate any changes in how you should study or prepare.

One change, though, that you definitely should take to heart: GMAT has made the pre-exam “tutorial” available online. You can watch it any time. Definitely, definitely watch that at least once when you are calm and relaxed at home. Do NOT put off watching that video until you are stressed out, sitting in the test center, ready to take your GMAT. Get it out of the way early, so you can keep your focus on test day.

What will not change on the GMAT
  • The total GMAT score will not change. In fact, as noted above, nothing about how you should study or prepare really changes. You see, GMAT’s CAT algorithm is so good that they really don’t need 37 Quant and 41 Verbal questions to assess you. After April 16, the GMAT score will still have the same scale, and all the statistical indicators of the GMAT will remain unchanged. In other words, any particular GMAT score will still mean the same thing.

     
  • The AWA and IR sections will not change at all. The allowed optional breaks will not change at all.

     
  • If you choose to get the Enhanced Score Report, there will be no major changes to that. Yes, GMAC will have to update the number of questions, but other than this, there will be no meaningful changes to the ESR.
What do these changes on the GMAT mean for me?
Should you change your test date in response to this news? I would recommend that you be cautious and circumspect about changing anything.

If your test day is April 16, 2018 or later, then you have absolutely nothing to gain by moving it earlier. By doing so, you would make your life more difficult while gaining not one iota of an advantage. Bad move.

If your test date is before April 16, 2018, then consider your situation. If you already have been following a study plan and you feel confident about your schedule, don’t upset the apple cart simply for the sake of saving 23 minutes.  If, on the other hand, you feel your studies would benefit significantly from a few more weeks of preparation and you feel you have a legitimate reason to delay your GMAT anyway, then move it back.

Of course, another thing that doesn’t change is that high quality GMAT preparation can help you improve your score significantly. That’s precisely how Magoosh can help you!

The post The GMAT Gets Shorter! appeared first on Magoosh GMAT Blog.
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The Official Guide for the GMAT Review 2019: Should You Buy It? [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: The Official Guide for the GMAT Review 2019: Should You Buy It?
What is the Official Guide for GMAT Review?
The Official Guide for GMAT review is a book, or rather a three-book set: a main GMAT Official Guide book , and two smaller books, one focusing on Quantitative and the other focusing on Verbal. These books are available for purchase in the MBA.com store. And yes, Magoosh does recommend buying the main GMAT OG, and possibly the Verbal and Quant books too.

We recommend these books because the practice material is of the highest possible quality. Each official guide book for the GMAT are published by Wiley, a major academic publisher. The content itself is designed by the same team that makes the actual GMAT exam.

As you may know, GMAC, the folks who create the GMAT, recently released three volumes of The Official Guide for the GMAT 2019. I review these new editions of the Official Guide for the GMAT in this book review.

The Official Guide for the GMAT 2019
The three new volumes are as follows:



1) The Official Guide for the GMAT 2019 (sky-blue trim and title on cover)

2) The Official Guide for the GMAT Verbal Review 2019 (purple trim and title on cover)

3) The Official Guide for the GMAT Quantitative Review 2019 (aqua-blue trim and title on cover)

FACT: Each one of #1-3 of these replaces a corresponding 2018 version published about a year ago.

FACT: Each one of #1-3 has about 25% new content, compared to its 2018 correlate.



Another new Official Guide?
As readers of this blog may know, I have the utmost respect for the GMAT exam as one of the finest standardized tests. Consequently, I have the highest respect for the content creators and psychometricians at GMAC who design this test. I have met some of these people, and they are impressive.

Having said that, GMAC is a company, and, like any company, it leverages what it can to generate profits. In the “old days” (up until several years ago), they would publish a new OG every 3-4 years, and often they would have a particularly good reason to do so.  For example, they published the OG13 when they were introducing the Integrated Reasoning section in 2012: that was a 100% legitimate reason to update the OG.  For the past several years, they have published a new OG every year, and they are rushing each new edition out at a pace far faster than that of other standardized test OGs. This new-OG-every-year rhythm is driven more by profit-seeking than by any legitimate pedagogical concern.  It’s basically a ploy to separate the vulnerably anxious test-taking population from as much of its money as possible.   Caveat emptor.

I will point out that the OG 2019, like the OG 2018 and OG 2017, offer all the questions from the book online, if you want to practice them on a computer rather than on a hardcopy.  Furthermore, that online question bank is where they keep the practice Integrated Reasoning questions.

Should I buy the new Official Guide?
Criticisms aside, should you, the student studying for the GMAT, buy these new books?

If you are just starting your studies for the GMAT and haven’t bought any official materials yet, then yes, you should buy some version of the GMAT OG, and you might as well buy the newest one available.

If you already have an earlier edition, such as the OG 2018, the OG 2017, or even the OG13 or OG2015, and are already working through it, then I would not advise you to buy another version. If you master everything any of those volumes, that’s enough for a high 700s score. After all, the GMAT itself hasn’t changed since the introduction of IR in 2012. The new OG may be marginally more GMAT-like, but I am NOT going to say that it’s so much better than previous editions that you should run out to buy the new one. Undoubtedly, the marketers at GMAC would love it if a large number of students thought that way, but, with all due respect to the people at GMAC, I want to discourage this line of thinking.

One other reason to buy the new guide is you have already finished working through the OG2018 and need more practice questions: about 25% of the questions are new, not repeats from the previous edition. Similarly, if you exhausted an earlier edition studying for a first take of the GMAT, and now you need to study for a retake, then the new questions in one of the other earlier editions would help you.

What about the Verbal Review and Quant Review?
These are similar enhancements over the earlier editions. If you only have about a month to study for the GMAT, you probably wouldn’t have time to do any questions other than those from the OG. Even in some of our three-month study schedules, folks barely have enough time to learn and review the content they need to master — they don’t have time for these extra questions.

If you are a practice-question maven who has already raced through the OG and need more official questions, or if you exhausted the OG on your first take and now you want to practice for a retake, then these books are an excellent source of official practice questions.

If you already have the earlier editions, by all means, use those first. Only buy these new books if you don’t already own the earlier editions.

What’s Special about the GMAT OGs?
So why buy any GMAT Official Guide? Well, for one, as I mentioned, these books have absolutely 100% the most authentic practice questions you can find anywhere. All of the Official Guide practice sets are created by the same folks who make the real exam, and are even taken from actual past tests. Past tests are the only source for the Verbal, Quant, and IR questions, though. You won’t see any of those questions on a current exam. However, you will see the AWA questions from the OG on the test. The GMAT Official Guide actually includes a complete list of the AWA prompts you might see on test day, as does the official GMAT website.

And speaking of AWA, the GMAT Official Guide includes something you can’t get from their official website: the official scoring guide for the AWA essay. In addition to that unique material, the OG’s descriptions of test structure and logistics are more accurate and complete than anything you could find elsewhere.

This book does have some minor shortcomings. The tutorial and advice portions of the book are short and dry. And the answer explanations are frequently inadequate. Often, the explanation essentially just says “Answer A is right because it is; answers B,C,D, and E are wrong because they’re wrong.” So you’ll want to supplement your GMAT Official Guide with tutorials and answer explanations from a reputable third party such as Magoosh.

OG 2019 Book Review: Summary
Understandably, most students studying for the GMAT want to do everything in their power to prepare. By all means, use the best resources, follow proven study schedules, and pursue the habits of excellence (without which the resources and study schedules are considerably less valuable!). All that is very important. Nevertheless, don’t feel compelled to leap for your credit card every single time GMAC publishes a new edition of something. The OG 2019 is a collection of absolutely excellent GMAT practice questions, but so are the two previous editions. If you are starting from scratch, you might as well start with the newest. If you already have an earlier GMAT OG, trust the one you have.

If you have any experience with using any of these new books, we would love to hear from you in the comments section below.

Bonus: Magoosh has developed GMAT Companion to help you use the Official Guide more effectively. Check it out!

The post The Official Guide for the GMAT Review 2019: Should You Buy It? appeared first on Magoosh GMAT Blog.
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2019 Best Business Schools [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: 2019 Best Business Schools
This post was updated in August 2018 to reflect the most recent rankings.

If you’re interested in pursuing your MBA at a top business school, then you’re in luck.

The lovely people at the US News and World report recently released their Best Grad and Business School rankings for 2019.

“But, we’re barely eight months into 2018,” you say. “How do they already have the 2019 rankings?”


Well, the US News and World Report uses the same methodology each year to survey all 480 master’s in business programs accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International. Of the 387 respondents this year, 127 supplied enough information to be ranked. All rankings were calculated in 2018.

This report’s rankings take into account such criteria as program assessments by peers and recruiters, graduate employment rates and placement successes, mean starting salaries for graduates, student selectivity, the mean GRE and GMAT scores of accepted applicants, and the program’s acceptance rate.

If you’re an all-around exceptional applicant (we’re talking top GMAT scores, excellent academic and work achievements, and clear goals for how you plan to use your MBA), then this list is definitely for you.

So, without any further ado, here are the best business schools of 2019.

US News & World Report’s 2019 Top Business Schools:
Top 10 MBA Programs:
No surprises here. In fact, the top ten list is very similar to previous years’. Harvard Business School (read more about our take on Harvard GMAT Scores) and University of Chicago (Booth) tie for the top spot, with University of Pennsylvania (Wharton) as first runner up.

1. Harvard University (tie)

1. University of Chicago (Booth) (tie)

3. University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)

4. Stanford University

5. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Sloan)

6. Northwestern University (Kellogg)

7. University of California, Berkeley (Haas) (tie)

7. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (Ross) (tie)

9. Columbia University

10. Dartmouth University (Tuck)

Top 25 MBA Programs:
11. Duke University (Fuqua) (tie)

11. Yale University (tie)

13. New York University (Stern)

14. University of Virginia (Darden)

15. Cornell University (Johnson)

16. University of California, Los Angeles (Anderson)

17. Carnegie Mellon University (Tepper) (tie)

17. University of Texas – Austin (McCombs) (tie)

19. University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill (Kenan-Flagler)

20. Emory University (Goizueta) (tie)

20. University of Southern California (Marshall) (tie)

22. University of Washington (Foster)

23. Rice University (Jones) (tie)

23. Washington University in St. Louis (Olin) (tie)

25. Georgetown University (McDonough)

The Best MBA Program for You
This year’s list includes everything from small, private universities to large, public schools. When viewing these rankings, don’t think that you absolutely have to apply to a top program, or that you must spend the money on a private university in order to get an amazing business school education. But keep in mind that, in the business world, b-school brands can carry a lot of weight.

Finding the MBA program that’s a good fit for you is no easy feat. You are going to need to take into account the specifics of each program — things like location, cost, size, student body, reputation, and program fit. Plus, you’ll want to factor in your personal goals, and where you’d like to see yourself, career-wise, in five and ten years.

Remember that some MBA programs are intended for young professionals, with little work experience, while others are intended for mid-career professionals. Some focus on entrepreneurship more than others. Some have more hands-on job training or a better career center. Weighing the pros and cons takes time and energy, and possibly the help of an admissions expert.

When looking at this list to narrow down your b-school options, be sure to think about your personal story, your past experience, and the skills you’ll need to achieve your career goals. You can worry about your GMAT score later…

(But in the meantime, take a look at the average GMAT scores of these top programs.)

 

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Manhattan GMAT Advanced Quant (Book Review) [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: Manhattan GMAT Advanced Quant (Book Review)

Gimmicks abound in test prep marketing and products, and there’s no shortage of books that will promise you a “top score” in Quant. Is Manhattan GMAT Advanced Quant one such gimmick product?

For the most part, the answer to that question is “no.” This book is not gimmicky, but rather a solidly useful math resource that many students can benefit from. But the book isn’t perfect, of course–no test prep book is. Let’s take a closer look at this book, its features, its merits, and its minor gimmicks.

 

The Structure of the Book
Manhattan GMAT Advanced Quant has an organized, patterned layout. Appropriately, you could almost call the setup of the chapters mathematical. The introduction is playfully labeled “Chapter 0.”

Next come four chapters that focus on the two major question formats in GMAT Quant: Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency. Chapters 1 and 2 cover principles and strategies/tactics for Problem Solving. And from there, Data Sufficiency gets its own principles and strategies/tactics chapters. In Manhattan terminology, “principles” refer to broad approaches that apply to all or most problems in a given question format. Principles discussed include making sure you understand every bit of information in the problem, doing your work on scratch paper, etc…. Strategies/tactics in this book include backsolving, picking numbers, eliminating answer choices through logic, and so on. The four chapter rundown of the principles, tactics, and strategies for top accuracy in PS and DS is labelled as “Part 1” of Manhattan GMAT Advanced Quant.

Part 2 consists of Chapters 5 through 8. The second part of Manahattan GMAT Advanced Quant covers a variety of math concepts and ideas that are equally important in Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency. This part can be seen as a general field guide to GMAT Quant. Immediately after that comes the similarly holistic Part 3. Part 3 consists of just one long chapter. Chapter 9, called “workout sets,” is exactly what it sounds like. This final chapter is an extended section of GMAT Quant practice problems.

The Good
Excellent writing

This may sound of secondary importance in math instruction. But if you’ve ever read an unbearably dry math tutorial, you know how important good writing is. Manhattan GMAT Advanced Quant is conversational, easy to understand, and breaks down concepts clearly and helpfully[/*]
Good examples

This book uses a lot of terms and ideas you may not have seen elsewhere. But it defines every novel idea clearly, with examples of how these ideas can be applied to real GMAT Quant questions. For instance, in Chapter 0, the book talks about the idea of using your “top-down brain” and your “bottom-up brain.” The book doesn’t just explain that “top down” refers to deductive logic while “bottom up” refers to intuition and snap judgments. It also has multiple flow charts showing how these two kinds of human thought can be used together to solve difficult math problems, step-by-step.

Covers all the strategy bases

Every aspect of math approach and strategy is in here. I can’t think of a single “go to” trick of my own as a tutor that this book doesn’t also teach. And the book had countless additional insights I now plan to share with my students.

Very GMAT-like practice questions

As with other Manhattan materials, the Quant problems here are spot on. A wide variety of question types are represented, with focus on medium-and-harder difficulties. And within that range, the format, conventions, and tone of the practice sets match very well to the real GMAT.

Insightful answer explanations

The answer explanations are thorough, accounting for the reasons behind every right and wrong answer. In addition, multiple approaches and strategies are explored in the explanations. I would say that the explanations here are even more complete than the also-wonderful Quant explanations in other Manhattan books.

The Bad
Relatively light on academic content

The formulas, theorems, patterns and so on that are used in GMAT Quant are touched on here, but they aren’t really the focus. Admittedly, in the introduction, the writers say this book is for test-takers who are already fairly knowledgeable about math, and want to up their game. But even the best GMAT Quant students can forget a formula or math fact now and again. So an index reviewing the academic facts would have been a nice addition to the book.

The book is more ‘general purpose’ than it claims to be

This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. But when the introduction indicates that the book is only for people who’ve scored a 47 or higher in GMAT Quant, it’s a bit misleading. Manhattan GMAT Advanced Math, when paired with other Manhattan GMAT math books that are more content heavy, could be helpful even to beginner and intermediate GMAT math scholars.

Further Reading and Resources
This book is just one of many possible resources you can use as you reach for your GMAT target score. For a full list of the books and resources Magoosh recommends, be sure to check out our Best GMAT Books and Resources page.

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Nova’s GMAT Prep Math Course (Book Review) [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: Nova’s GMAT Prep Math Course (Book Review)


The Nova Review is Finally Here!
A lot of students have been asking Magoosh’s experts for their opinion of Nova’s GMAT Math Prep Course. I purchased this book so I could take a closer look at it and give it the full review it deserves.

The verdict? This is a potential source of extra GMAT math practice for serious students. But Nova’s GMAT Math Prep Course also has some serious downsides you should be aware of before you decide to buy it.

The Pros of Using this Book
We’ll start with the advantages of this book.

When the advice and tutorials are good, they are really good. One thing I especially like is the fact that this book devotes an entire chapter to practice with graphs, charts, and tables. I’ve had so many students ask me for a good collection of infographic-based GMAT-quant practice. And with Nova, I’ve finally found one. Students will also really appreciate the detailed answer explanations, which show multiple alternate ways to tackle problems. A number of other very helpful tutorials await readers in the pages of Nova’s GMAT Math Prep course.

The practice questions also cover a very GMAT-like range of concepts. And most of the practice questions are close–if not perfectly matched–to what you’d see on test day.

The Cons of Using Nova for GMAT Math Practice
When advice or material is “off,” it’s way off. For example, this book tells you that the first five questions in the GMAT Quant section are especially important to your score and that you need to take extra time on them. This is a myth that the makers of the test have repeatedly tried to debunk. Nova also says that defined function problems (where a special symbol is a stand-in for a math operation) are common on the GMAT. This is debatable at best. More glaringly, the advice in the “Elimination Strategies” chapter is pretty much all incorrect. Do not eliminate an answer that repeats a number from the problem, or eliminate an answer that says there is not enough information… and really, do not follow any advice from that section of Nova’s GMAT Prep math course.

Editing and organization leave a lot to be desired here as well. The book is riddled with typos, especially in the math notations. This can make some practice problems confusing. Moreover, the assigned difficulty levels for the problems are off. You’ll find some surprisingly hard problems labelled as easy, and some easy problems inexplicably categorized as “very hard.” Problems are miscategorized in other ways as well. There’s a factorial problem in the function notation practice set, to give just one example.

Another issue is that question quality is less than perfect. Certain practice problems do not follow GMAT conventions. The wording of the problems can be more convoluted than it would be on the GMAT. And sometimes the geometric figures can be blatantly not “to scale.” On the real GMAT, Problem Solving geometry figures will always be to scale, unless otherwise noted. On occasion, you’ll also see answer choices that are very close together in value, while the figures in real GMAT answer choices are more likely to be spaced apart.

Most worryingly, this book deliberately includes a number of problems that would be harder than anything on the GMAT. In the introduction, the book says you need to master harder-than-GMAT problems in order to do well on the test. But in reality, the opposite tends to be true. A focus on any sort of non-GMAT-like problems–too easy or too hard–will be a distraction from preparing for real testing conditions. The overly hard problems and harder-than-average mix of problems in this book can be… well… a problem.

Further Reading and Resources
This book is just one of many possible resources you can use as you reach for your GMAT target score. For a full list of the books and resources Magoosh recommends, be sure to check out our Best GMAT Books and Resources page.

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Powerscore GMAT Critical Reasoning Bible (Book Review) [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: Powerscore GMAT Critical Reasoning Bible (Book Review)


An LSAT Powerhouse Tries its Hand at GMAT
PowerScore built its reputation as an LSAT company with its LSAT Critical Reasoning Bible. For those who don’t know, the LSAT is the GMAT Critical Reasoning section on steroids.

So when I first purchased the PowerScore GMAT Critical Reasoning Bible, I had high hopes that PowerScore would really know how to dissect one of the most difficult question types on the GMAT.

PowerScore did not disappoint. This is, overall, an excellent book for building GMAT CR skills, although it does have some minor flaws.

The Good
The PowerScore GMAT Critical Reasoning Bible is both thorough and insightful. This book includes extensive lists of keywords that can help you identify different things the CR passage authors are trying to do. There lists of keywords that help you distinguish between passages that make arguments and passages that give sets of facts. There are also keyword lists to help you identify claims, premises, alternative viewpoints, and so much more. In addition to those lists are pages and pages of insightful tutorials.

But perhaps the most uniquely helpful feature of this book is its series of “mini-drills.” These sets of practice exercises help you build different GMAT Critical Reading skills, such as identifying conclusions, correctly recognizing the tricks hidden in the incorrect CR answer choices, and so on.

In addition to this, the practice questions are very realistic. Every CR problem I looked at was well-designed, and would fit in perfectly on a real GMAT exam. I strongly recommend this book to anyone who needs to improve in CR. It’s also a good resource for those who are already good with GMAT Critical Reasoning questions, but want to perfect their game.

The Not-So-Good
With all of that said, this book does have a downside or two. The arrangement of information, for example, is a little “busy.” PowerScore fills the margins–outside of the main text–with notes and diagrams. All information in the margins is in a different, less bold font. This makes some important information hard to follow and easy to miss.

Moreover, the overall organization of the information can be a little confusing and arbitrary in places. For example, chapter 12 of the book focuses on numbers and percentages as they appear in a variety of CR question types. This chapter actually interrupts a series of chapters on specific question types. The following chapter goes back to covering question types, but arbitrarily groups argument evaluation, cannot-be-true, and principle question types together. If you want to focus your own studies on specific aspects of CR, you may need to read the table of contents or glossary/index very carefully to find what you’re looking for.

Further Reading and Resources
This book is just one of many possible resources you can use as you reach for your GMAT target score. For a full list of the books and resources Magoosh recommends, be sure to check out our Best GMAT Books and Resources page.

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How Important Is It to Buy the Most Recent GMAT Books? [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: How Important Is It to Buy the Most Recent GMAT Books?


When I was in college I hated buying textbooks. Balancing my limited student budget in the first place felt pretty miraculous, and then classes would start and BAM there went another $100, $200, even $300, just to buy the books I needed to take the classes that I had already paid to be in.

I hated buying these expensive books so much that I would spend hours and hours scheming about how I could get them for cheap or for free: I’d hunt down people who’d already taken the class and try to cut them deals for their used books. I’d sign up for obscure eBook free trials in the depths of the internet so I could download PDFs of the books I needed (and probably some computer viruses too). I’d even ask to borrow my professors’ copies for a few hours and just take photos of every single page on my phone.


Not the best way to study…

But the simplest way to save money was to buy older editions of the books I needed.

Sometimes buying older editions of textbooks was fine; maybe the current edition on our class syllabus just had a new foreword, and I could borrow a friend’s copy for the day and then be in the clear. But sometimes it became a problem. I once bought an old version of a Statistics textbook that ended up having an entirely different set of math questions than the ones we were supposed to do for homework.

The trick was to know when I could get away with a used book (or an iPhone photo of used book) and when I actually needed to dish out the money for the shiny new edition. If I knew for sure that I really needed the new book, dropping the cash on it didn’t hurt quite so much.

The GMAT is a lot like this.

There are tons of GMAT books on the market (have you read our reviews?), and new GMAT study material is always being released, along with the odd new edition of an established GMAT prep book. The trick is knowing when you need the hot new edition, and when you’re okay with the one being resold on Amazon for 80% off (or the one lurking in your parents’ closet).


Spot the outdated GMAT study materials!

Is last year’s GMAT study material truly outdated?
Each year, there’s a new wave of GMAT books crashing onto our bookshelves at Magoosh. Publishers are keen to be as up-to-date as possible, as close to the current version of the GMAT as possible, and so they regularly churn out new editions of their prep books. A few bits of text get switched out, some practice sets get augmented with new questions, and, if we’re really lucky, an extra practice test makes an appearance.

Naturally, test-takers gravitate towards the newest GMAT books – after all, you’re trying to give yourself the best shot at scoring well on the test – and last year’s editions become little more than tinder. That’s perfectly reasonable; it’d be a shame to spend all your time on money on material that’s not even relevant to what you’ll see on test day, wouldn’t it?

You can probably guess my stance on this, based on my college textbook anecdote: You do not always need to buy the newest editions of the GMAT study materials. More often than not, the newest edition of a GMAT book is essentially identical to that of the year before. The covers tend to change noticeably (thrilling new colors!), but the contents stay unabashedly unaltered. Simply put, you can’t assume that a new GMAT book is better than an old GMAT book. Often, they’re equally helpful.

So you don’t need the newest GMAT books?
Well…here’s the caveat: sometimes the test does change, and so the books have to change, too. And when that happens, it’s vital that you start with the most up-to-date material. In the case of the GMAT, the last major change was the addition of the “Integrated Reasoning” section in June of 2012. Books from before that update are, without question, inferior to newer books. And even today, companies are adding new Integrated Reasoning material to their offerings as that section becomes gradually more important to test-takers and admissions offices.

Yet, for the most part, if you’re looking at GMAT prep materials published in 2015 and other resources published in 2014 or 2013, whether it’s from Manhattan GMAT or from GMAC themselves, most of what’s inside will be the same. That’s largely due to the nature of the test. The GMAT is standardized because admissions offices need to be able to compare scores across different versions of the test, including question banks used across different years. By nature of being standardized, the test cannot change drastically without public acknowledgement of the change. You might note that this is precisely why Integrated Reasoning is (for the time being) not taken very seriously by most test-takers or admissions committees; because it’s a new section, it’s not possible to compare current applicants to those who took the test before 2012.

Because changes to the GMAT make the new scores harder for schools to use, GMAC changes the test as little as possible, and practice material changes similarly rarely. Of course, look for the differences between editions before you buy, and don’t buy books that are from before the last public change to the GMAT. But in general, it’s not so important to have the most recent edition – it’s likely the same as last year’s.

What’s the best GMAT prep book to buy new?
While GMAC changes their exam as little as possible, small changes to the test occur each year: minor shifts in content, slight changes in question format, that sort of thing.

Many independent publishers of GMAT books don’t check for these smaller changes. And even when GMAT bookmakers do check for tiny, subtle changes to the exam, they may not notice changes. Or they may misinterpret or exaggerate small changes to the test, creating updated materials that aren’t quite GMAT-like.

Still, there is one source for GMAT books that will accurately show any small recent changes to the exam: the GMAC itself. Every year, GMAC releases a new set of the three official GMAT books: The Official Guide for GMAT Review, The Official Guide for GMAT Verbal Review, and The Official Guide for GMAT Quantitative Review. Because these books are made by the same company that makes the GMAT itself, they will perfectly capture any minor changes that are made in a given year.

Still, buying the very newest official GMAT guide isn’t all that important. In fact, it can pay to buy an older official GMAT prep book instead. Used GMAT study resources from GMAC are plentiful and affordable. With the money it takes to buy a brand-new official GMAT prep book, you could purchase multiple used GMAC-created GMAT books from the last few years. This gives you a lot more practice material to work with.

New changes to the GMAT: Will they make current GMAT study material and GMAT books obsolete?
In 2016, GMAC launched a pilot program for a reformatted version of the GMAT. The pilot program went well, and the new experimental format for the test has now become the standard.

Basically the GMAT now includes a “Select Section Order” feature for all test-takers. This change (as the name suggests) allows you to decide which order you want to take the GMAT sections in.

As you can see, even though this is a big change for the GMAT, it doesn’t actually affect the content on the test. Subject material, question format, and difficulty haven’t changed. It just allows test-takers to choose the order in which they take the sections of the test.

Because the content has remained the same, the formatting change definitely doesn’t make pre-2017 GMAT books obsolete. If you’re taking practice tests in older print books, you can simply skip around and go through the sections in the order you choose. The CDs that come with the older books could become outdated, as they don’t have a “pick your order” option, but this is a pretty minor inconvenience – especially since web-based platforms for GMAT test practice (such as our very own Magoosh GMAT) should be able to adapt pretty quickly.

So to answer the big question…
Do you need to buy this year’s newest GMAT book? No, you do not!

A combination of older print books and updated online GMAT prep should be fine, as long as the print books were published after 2012. You can use the money you save to buy even more GMAT prep material, put it back in your savings, or, you know, be like me and spend it all on Spotify and fancy juice.

Happy studying! ?


Enjoy this juice, you earned it.

Editor’s Note: This post was originally published in December 2014 and has been updated for freshness, accuracy, and comprehensiveness. Special thanks to Molly Kiefer for her contributions to this post.

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What Kind of Math is on the GMAT? Breakdown of Quant Concepts by Frequ [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: What Kind of Math is on the GMAT? Breakdown of Quant Concepts by Frequency


The biggest secret to GMAT Quant success is a simple one: identify and study the correct Quant concepts. But what are the GMAT math topics? And which ones are the most important?

To answer all of these questions, I looked at official GMATPrep tests 3 and 4, and the Official Guide for the GMAT Review 2019. Read on to find out what I learned from analyzing the GMAT quantitative topics in these 766 official questions.

What Kind of Math is On the GMAT?
Here is a GMAT Quant section breakdown (with category descriptions as needed):

  • Word problems: interpreting the math in stories and descriptions
  • Data interpretation: interpreting the math in charts and tables
  • Algebra: includes both “pure algebra,” and algebra as applied to other GRE Quant concepts
  • Percents/ratios/fractions
  • Coordinate geometry: shapes, lines, and angles on the coordinate plane
  • Two-dimensional geometry: shapes, lines, and angles not on the coordinate plane
  • Three-dimensional geometry: volume, surface area, etc…
  • Statistics: mean, median, standard deviation, etc…
  • Powers and roots
  • Probability/combinatronics
  • Integer properties and aritmetic
  • Inequalities
  • Functions
  • Sequences
What’s the Frequency of the GMAT Quant Concepts?
Word problem interpretation is the most frequent concept, showing up on well over half of the questions. Integer properties and arithmetic come second, appearing on nearly a third of all of the questions.

GMAT Quant Section Breakdown
The table below lists GMAT Quant concepts in order of most-to-least frequent. (And again, the most frequent concepts are obviously the most important!) Click the topic names to read on a given topic in more detail. In the case of data interpretation, the link goes to an IR resource that is also relevant to Quant.

You can treat the table and its links as a GMAT Quantitative syllabus of sorts. Follow the links to learn everything about arithmetic, geometry, and proportion, everything about probability, stats, and counting, etc… Just about anything you’d need to know can be seen or accessed in the table!

GMAT Quant conceptPercentage frequency

Word Problems58.2%

Integer properties and arithmetic31.1%

Algebra16.3%

Percents, ratios, and fractions13.7%

Two dimensional geometry10.6%

Statistics6.3%

Powers and roots6.3%

Probability and combinatronics5%

Inequalities4.7%

Sequences3.2%

Coordinate geometry2.9%

Data interpretation0.9%

Three dimensional geometry0.8%

Functions0.4%



Note: Some questions tested multiple concepts and were thus counted more than one time in more than one category. As a result, the percentages in the chart above add up to more than 100%.

GMAT Question Type Breakdown for Quant: The Takeaway
As you can see in the table above, not all GMAT Quant concepts are created equal. Certain GMAT Quant topics will definitely appear more often than others.



A Word on Word Problems
Clearly, the GMAT loves to test its Quant concepts through word problems. Word problems can overlap with just about topic: statistics, algebra, inequalities, you name it. There can even be coordinate word problems and absolute value word problems! So make sure you build math-related reading comprehension skills as you prepare for the exam.

The Very Most Important GMAT Quant Topics
Several other high-frequency Quant concepts stand out when you look at the table above. Word problems, integer properties, arithmetic, algebra, percents, ratios, fractions, and geometry are the most important. These topics all are clearly vital to GMAT Quant success.

The Not-So-Important Math Topics
Lower on the chart, you can see some concepts that seem a good deal less important. Sequences, the coordinate plane, three dimensional objects, functions, and data interpretation don’t occur all that often; these topics have minimal importance in GMAT Quant.

A Second Look at Data Interpretation
Not so fast though. Let’s take a closer look at that last “unimportant” GMAT Quant concept I mentioned.

Although it is clearly not that important in the GMAT Quant section, data interpretation is still a big part of the GMAT as a whole. Remember, the Integrated Reasoning section consists primarily of math data interpretation questions. So be sure to study this concept as part of your overall GMAT prep.

The GMAT Quant Section Breakdown in Greater Context
Speaking of other sections of the GMAT, make sure you understand where these Quant concepts fit into the test as a whole. The GMAT maths syllabus should be seen as part of the syllabus for the entire exam.

So be sure to check out my colleague Rachel’s Complete Hassle-Free Guide to the GMAT test. Or for a quicker snapshot of the most common question, GMAT-wide, see Mike’s “Most Common GMAT Topics and Questions.”

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What’s the Difference Between the Executive Assessment and the GMAT? [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: What’s the Difference Between the Executive Assessment and the GMAT?


Are you an experienced manager who is considering entering an MBA program? You may be able to take the Executive Assessment (EA) rather than the GMAT. But how is the EA different from the GMAT? And how can you make sure it’s the right exam for you?

What is the Executive Assessment?
The Executive Assessment (EA) is an admissions exam designed for executive MBA programs. The test features Quant, Verbal, and Integrated Reasoning questions. The EA is similar in structure to the GMAT, and is made by the same company that makes the GMAT.

What is the difference between the Executive Assessment and the GMAT?
The Executive Assessment and the GMAT are both made by the Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC). In spite of this, these two tests have a number of distinct differences.

Most importantly, the EA is designed for applicants to Executive MBA (EMBA) programs. An EMBA is a type of MBA specifically geared toward established, experienced managers who want to advance their careers to even higher levels.

So what does this alternate test for seasoned executives look like, compared to the GMAT? I’ve outlined the key differences in the table below.

Test structure: Executive Assessment vs. GMAT

name of examEXECUTIVE ASSESSMENTGMAT

Total time90 minutes3 hours and 7 minutes

Verbal section30 minutes, 14 questions65 minutes, 36 questions

Quant section30 minutes, 14 questions62 minutes, 31 questions

Integrated reasoning30 minutes, 12 questions30 minutes, 12 questions

AWANo AWA section30 minutes, 1 question

Adaptive difficulty?NoYes

Other Differences in Content and Difficulty
Most obviously from the table, the Executive Assessment is easier than the GMAT. Note that the EA is shorter and lacks an AWA section.

There is another aspect of the EA that easier too: its math content. On the EA, you see fewer of the harder math topics from the GMAT. For example, probability, statistics, and combinatronics are less common on the Executive Assessment.

The Similarities between EA and GMAT Structure
The range of Quant and Verbal topics on these two B-school admissions tests are largely the same. Although certain challenging math concepts are less frequent on the Executive Assessment, the GMAT and the EA have the same range of Quant concepts. The question formats are the same as well; the tests share a comparable mix of Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency.

And for Verbal, the mix will be exactly the same. Both the EA and the GMAT have comparable proportions of Critical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension and Sentence Correction questions. Moreover, the IR sections are exactly the same between these two tests.

Ultimately, you can think of the Executive Assessment as “GMAT Lite.” The EA has all the same elements as the GMAT, but stripped down to a more basic, “softer” version.

Who can submit EA scores, and which schools accept them?
While the EMBA is designed for Executive MBA programs, other non-Executive MBA programs sometimes accept the EA from experienced applicants.

To give just one example, UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business accepts EA scores for both its EMBA program and its weekend MBA program. As long as you have at least 10 years of experience, you can submit EA scores when applying for either of these degree paths.

Berkeley’s requirements are fairly typical. You will generally need about a decade of managerial experience to be EA-eligible at most B-schools. (The GMAC itself has no minimum experience requirement for EA registration, however.)

The EA is accepted at quite a few schools around the world. For a complete list of universities and programs that use Executive Assessment scores, go to the official EA website.

How to Study for the Executive Assessment
The Executive Assessment has its own section on the GMAC homepage. This official EA website includes an EA preparation page. On that page, you can access a small selection of free practice questions and purchase additional EA practice materials.

However, you don’t necessarily need to use any official EA prep. GMAT prep materials will also do just fine. If you decide to go that route, I recommend official GMAT practice from MBA.com and practice from Magoosh GMAT.

When using GMAT resources for EA prep, just remember to focus on an EA-like mix of GMAT math questions. For a detailed look at the mix of math on the Executive Assessment, consult the official EA Math Review.

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GMAT Accommodations: GMAT Extended Time and More [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: GMAT Accommodations: GMAT Extended Time and More


GMAT accommodations are available for test-takers with disabilities. GMAT extended time is one of the most common offerings, but other assistance is available too. Read on to learn more about GMAT accommodations.

How many different GMAT accommodations are there? Can I get a complete list?
There’s more to GMAT accommodations than just GMAT extended time. There are many possible accommodations for test-takers that qualify. You can find all of the necessary details here: Accommodations for Test Takers with Disabilities. Other accommodations supported by the Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC), the makers of the test, include:

  • Additional testing time (all tests are timed)
  • Additional or extended rest breaks
  • Allowance of a medical device in the testing rooms
  • A trackball mouse
  • A reader who can read the test items to the test-taker and record test-taker responses
  • A recorder to record test-taker responses
  • Enlarged font on the PC monitor
  • A sign language interpreter
How do I apply for GMAT accommodations?
The steps for applying for GMAT accommodations can be found on the GMAT’s official “Register as a Test-Taker with Disabilities” page.

In brief, here is what you need to do.

  • Create a GMAT account on MBA.com.
  • Fill out the GMAT Exam Accommodations Request Form, which is accessible through the GMAT Supplement for test-takers with disabilities.
  • Attach documentation for any of the following disability types:

    Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

    Learning and Cognitive Disabilities

    Physical and Systemic Disabilities

    Psychological Disabilities

    Sensory Disabilities (Vision and Hearing)
  • Send completed forms and documentation to Pearson VUE by fax or post (see the contact info below). Confirmation that you’ve applied will come in four days to the email address associated with your GMAT account, and an eligibility decision will be made and emailed to you within a month.
  • If they approve your request for accommodations, you will then be able to schedule accommodated testing. It is not possible to schedule accommodated testing before receiving approval for GMAT accommodations. Therefore, we suggest that you not book a testing appointment until you receive a decision regarding your accommodation request.
Additional Tips on Applying for GMAT Extended Time or other GMAT Accommodations
  • Download the GMAT Handbook. This contains not just information about testing accommodaitons, but also many other things you neeed to know as you register for the test and get ready for test day.
  • Download the Supplement for Test Takers with Disabilities. As mentioned above, this supplement contains the forms you need to fill out, and is full of additional helpful tips and instructions.
  • Collect documentation of your disability from a doctor. Make sure to review the Guidelines for Documentation in the Supplement, and consider sharing those guidelines with your doctor as part of the consultation.
  • Make sure to leave six to eight weeks for approval. (Apply early, in other words!)
Contact Info for GMAT Accommodations
Test-takers with disabilities should send completed a GMAT Test Accommodations Request Form and all supporting documentation to Pearson VUE at one of the following addresses:

Fax:

+1 (952) 681-3681[/*]
Mail / Courier Service:

Pearson VUE

Attention: GMAT Disability Services

5601 Green Valley Drive, Ste. 220

Bloomington, MN 55437

USA

How to use Magoosh to simulate GMAT extended time
You can add GMAT extended time to your Magoosh GMAT practice tests. First go to the Account tab on the upper right and choose Profile:



Then select the green Edit Account Information button on the bottom left:



And then select the time change you want:



NOTE: Special thanks to Matt Slayton in Magoosh Student Help for doing the initial research and assisting with the writing.

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The Official Guide for the GMAT Review 2019: Should You Buy It? [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: The Official Guide for the GMAT Review 2019: Should You Buy It?
What is the Official Guide for GMAT Review?
The Official Guide for GMAT review is a book, or rather a three-book set: a main GMAT Official Guide book , and two smaller books, one focusing on Quantitative and the other focusing on Verbal. These books are available for purchase in the MBA.com store. And yes, Magoosh does recommend buying the main GMAT OG, and possibly the Verbal and Quant books too.

We recommend these books because the practice material is of the highest possible quality. Each official guide book for the GMAT are published by Wiley, a major academic publisher. The content itself is designed by the same team that makes the actual GMAT exam.

As you may know, GMAC, the folks who create the GMAT, recently released three volumes of The Official Guide for the GMAT 2020. I review these new editions of the Official Guide for the GMAT in this book review.



The Official Guide for the GMAT 2020
The three new volumes are as follows:

FACT: Each one of #1-3 of these replaces a corresponding 2019 version published about a year ago.

FACT: Each one of #1-3 has about 25% new content, compared to its 2019 correlate.

FACT: The most recent edition comes with both an online and mobile app version of the questions. (The 2019 edition had online but not mobile access.)

Another new Official Guide?
As readers of this blog may know, I have the utmost respect for the GMAT exam as one of the finest standardized tests. Consequently, I have the highest respect for the content creators and psychometricians at GMAC who design this test. I have met some of these people, and they are impressive.

Having said that, GMAC is a company, and, like any company, it leverages what it can to generate profits. In the “old days” (up until several years ago), they would publish a new OG every 3-4 years, and often they would have a particularly good reason to do so.  For example, they published the OG13 when they were introducing the Integrated Reasoning section in 2012: that was a 100% legitimate reason to update the OG.  For the past several years, they have published a new OG every year, and they are rushing each new edition out at a pace far faster than that of other standardized test OGs. This new-OG-every-year rhythm is driven more by profit-seeking than by any legitimate pedagogical concern.  It’s basically a ploy to separate the vulnerably anxious test-taking population from as much of its money as possible.   Caveat emptor.

Accessing the Electronic Versions of GMAT Official Guide 2020
I will again point out that the OG 2020, like the OG 2019 and OG 2018, offer all the questions from the book online, if you want to practice them on a computer rather than on a hardcopy.  Furthermore, that online question bank is where they keep the practice Integrated Reasoning questions. And, as I also mentioned, the newest edition offers a mobile version of the app.

Frustratingly, however, instructions on how to access the books’ questions via app are vague. And by “vague,” I mean non-existent. At first, I tried to search the official website for GMAT prep (MBA.com) for the app, but the only app I found there cost $4.99 and was for the 2015 edition of the OG, while the 2020 GMAT Official Guide references a free app that would obviously be for 2020.

Finally, after poking around a good deal on my Google and on my own phone’s app store, I realized that the app was not hosted on the official GMAT website at all. Instead, you’re supposed to use the Wiley Efficient Learning App via Google Play or iTunes. This makes sense in retrospect, since the book tells you to go to wiley.gmat.com for the web-based practice questions, and that URL actually forwards you to the GMAT section of the Wiley Efficient Learning website. But directions for the mobile app certainly could have been clearer to say the least.

Should I buy the new Official Guide?
Criticisms aside, should you, the student studying for the GMAT, buy these new books?

If you are just starting your studies for the GMAT and haven’t bought any official materials yet, then yes, you should buy some version of the GMAT OG, and you might as well buy the newest one available.

If you already have an earlier edition, such as the OG 2019, the OG 2018, or even the OG13 or OG2015, and are already working through it, then I would not advise you to buy another version. If you master everything in any of those volumes, that’s enough for a high 700s score. After all, although the GMAT test was changed to a shorter format in 2018, the GMAT questions themselves haven’t changed since the introduction of IR in 2012. The new OG may be marginally more GMAT-like, but I am NOT going to say that it’s so much better than previous editions that you should run out to buy the new one. Undoubtedly, the marketers at GMAC would love it if a large number of students thought that way, but, with all due respect to the people at GMAC, I want to discourage this line of thinking.

One other reason to buy the new guide is you have already finished working through the OG2019 and need more practice questions: about 25% of the questions are new, not repeats from the previous edition. Similarly, if you exhausted an earlier edition studying for a first take of the GMAT, and now you need to study for a retake, then the new questions in one of the other earlier editions would help you.

What about the Verbal Review and Quant Review?
These are similar enhancements over the earlier editions. If you only have about a month to study for the GMAT, you probably wouldn’t have time to do any questions other than those from the OG. Even in some of our three-month study schedules, folks barely have enough time to learn and review the content they need to master — they don’t have time for these extra questions.

If you are a practice-question maven who has already raced through the OG and need more official questions, or if you exhausted the OG on your first take and now you want to practice for a retake, then these books are an excellent source of official practice questions.

If you already have the earlier editions, by all means, use those first. Only buy these new books if you don’t already own the earlier editions.

What’s Special about the GMAT OGs?
So why buy any GMAT Official Guide? Well, for one, as I mentioned, these books have absolutely 100% the most authentic practice questions you can find anywhere. All of the Official Guide practice sets are created by the same folks who make the real exam, and are even taken from actual past tests. Past tests are the only source for the Verbal, Quant, and IR questions, though. You won’t see any of those questions on a current exam. However, you will see the AWA questions from the OG on the test. The GMAT Official Guide actually includes a complete list of the AWA prompts you might see on test day, as does the official GMAT website.

And speaking of AWA, the GMAT Official Guide includes something you can’t get from their official website: the official scoring guide for the AWA essay. (Admittedly, a version of the score guide is buried on the GMAC website, but the wording is slightly outdated, and the guide is inconveniently separate from all of the other materials on MBA.com). In addition to having the only full, updated guide to GMAT AWA scores, the OG’s descriptions of test structure and logistics are more accurate and complete than anything you could find elsewhere.

This three volume set does have some minor shortcomings. The tutorial and advice portions of the book are short and dry. And the answer explanations are frequently inadequate. Often, the explanation essentially just says “Answer A is right because it is; answers B,C,D, and E are wrong because they’re wrong.” So you’ll want to supplement your GMAT Official Guide with tutorials and answer explanations from a reputable third party such as Magoosh.

OG 2020 Book Review: Summary
Understandably, most students studying for the GMAT want to do everything in their power to prepare. By all means, use the best resources, follow proven study schedules, and pursue the habits of excellence (without which the resources and study schedules are considerably less valuable!). All that is very important. Nevertheless, don’t feel compelled to leap for your credit card every single time GMAC publishes a new edition of something. The OG 2020 is a collection of absolutely excellent GMAT practice questions, but so are the two previous editions. If you are starting from scratch, you might as well start with the newest. If you already have an earlier GMAT OG, trust the one you have.

If you have any experience with using any of these new books, we would love to hear from you in the comments section below.

Bonus: Magoosh has developed GMAT Companion Workbook  and a GMAT Official Question support forum to help you use the Official Guide more effectively. Check it out!

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How Long Should You Study for the GMAT? (Take the Quiz!) [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: How Long Should You Study for the GMAT? (Take the Quiz!)


How long should you study for the GMAT? Effective GMAT prep takes a lot of time, regardless of your skill level. Average GMAT students can expect to spend 100-170 hours studying, over the course of 2-3 months. The very top scorers on the GMAT often spend more than 170 hours, with study plans lasting up to 6 months.

You may be wondering if studying makes that much of a difference in your score. Well, official studies show that it really does! According to GMAC (the test-maker), 62% of test-takers begin studying at least four weeks ahead of their test date–and there’s a direct correlation between the time you put in and your score. On average, those who received scores of 500+ studied at least 60 hours.

To find out exactly how long you’ll need to get the score you want, take the quiz! Then, come back to the post and we’ll talk about some factors which may come into play when considering how long to study for GMAT.

Take the quiz!

 



How Long Does It Take to Study for the GMAT? Narrowing It Down
It’s really easy to answer “How long to prepare for GMAT?” by saying it depends, but that’s not helpful for test takers creating GMAT study plans! Instead, let’s consider some of the factors that affect the amounts of time you need for GMAT prep.

How much do you enjoy tests?
The first consideration to answer how long you should study for the GMAT is simply: how good are you at the whole standardized-test thing in general? Some people regularly ace standardized tests. Others regularly flub them. This is an estimation—at a gut-level, how comfortable are you, and how successful have you been, with the whole standardized-test thing? Consider as well how well you do on longer tests; .

How much of a point increase do you want?
Let’s say you have taken a , relatively cold, with little prep, and got some score. We’ll call this a baseline score. What is your target score? How much do you want to improve from this cold-take baseline? Let’s say, with moderate prep, you could improve 50 points over a relatively cold-take. That’s readily do-able. Improving 100 points—that’s more of a challenge. Improving 150 or 200 points or more—that will take exceptionally diligent work, including more practice tests and practice questions. You’ll need to sustain this GMAT study plan over quite some time, and even then, an improvement of this magnitude is not guaranteed.

How competitive are the programs you’re applying to?
If you’re not sure how much of a point increase you need, do some research into the way the schools you’re applying to use GMAT scores. For some business schools, GMAT scores are super important. Others may not even require the test (though chances are, at least one program you’re looking at will). Looking at admitted students’ average GMAT scores and going in-depth on admissions websites can help you answer this question.

How long do you have for GMAT prep?
A three month study plan, with 1-2 hours of GMAT study time per weekday and a single 3-4 hour study session on each weekend (about 10 hours per week)—that I would call moderate study, probably enough to produce for most people a 50-100 point increase over a relatively cold-take score. Again, this assumes eight hours of sleep a night, a healthy lifestyle, and a normal college-graduate level of learning and remembering.

If you want to improve substantially more than 50-100 points, extend your GMAT study time for longer time than three months. In general, the more you can spread your study out over a long period—say, six months—the more time you will have to return a second and even a third time to each topic. This will take advantage of how the brain learns and processes. Repeated exposure helps to encode material into long-term memory.

How much time do you have?
Let’s face it: what we want to do and what we can do are often two different things. How many days you should study depends in part on how many hours per day you can study. Let’s say that 1 hour a day for six months would be very approximately equivalent to six hours of studying a day for one month. The caveat, of course, is most people have real limits concerning how much they can focus.

Many also have limitations on how much info they can absorb and assimilate in a single day. Can you put in six hours a day of quality, high-focus study time, day after day, for a month? If so, that’s fantastic. However, for most people—not only because of the practical constraints of job and family, but also because of the cognitive constraints on focus and assimilation—the best option would be less-time-per-day over a longer number of days studying for the GMAT.

How strong are your skills already?
Consider the two big categories—math and verbal. On a 1-10 scale, how would you rank your relative aptitudes in each? This may play into extra time over and above the time you spend studying specifically for the GMAT.

What are your weak areas? And how weak are they?
If you would rate either of the above categories three or below, that’s a red flag. That’s an indication you need extra GMAT study time and thus an extra head start. This is a big curveball in the how-long-do-I-study-for-the-GMAT question!

If you are a math whiz but weak in verbal, and most especially if English is not your first language, then yes, pursue a moderate study schedule, say, a three-month study schedule for folks stronger in math, and in addition to that, READ! Read at least an hour a day—two hours a day would be better. Reading the high-brow material recommended at that blog will accustom your ear to advanced grammatical constructions typical of GMAT Sentence Correction, and will help you practice the analysis skills you will need on both GMAT Critical Reasoning and GMAT Reading Comprehension. Ideally, you will begin this daily reading habit well before the rest of your GMAT studying—a year or more. Where will you get the time to do all this reading? Well, if you sharply reduce TV, video games, and other forms of electronic entertainment, you actually will be doing your brain a favor.

If you are relatively comfortable in verbal, and you haven’t even looked at math since an unfriendly farewell a few years back, then you need to study math, starting pretty much as soon as you finish reading this post. You don’t get a calculator on the GMAT Quant section, so practice mental math—every day, you should add & subtract & multiply & divide in your head. Get remedial books published for high school students, “Algebra Review”, “Geometry Review”, and start reading. Look for every possible application of math in your life. Think areas of rooms, grocery bills, gas mileage, and the like. Do the real world math. Ideally, all this focus on math should begin months before you embark on, say, a three-month study schedule for folks stronger in verbal.

In both cases, this extra focus you give one area or the other should be considered over and above how long you study for the GMAT. These are the extra number of hours you need to study for the GMAT.

So How Long Should You Study for the GMAT?
As you can see, studying for the GMAT is a highly personalized process affected by a number of factors. If you’re still not sure, go back to your quiz results and take a look at the study schedules in more detail. The study schedules will give you more information about what GMAT test practice looks like, and more of a sense of what’s required to really ace the exam on test day.

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How to Understand Your GMAT Score Percentiles [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: How to Understand Your GMAT Score Percentiles
This post has been updated to include GMAC’s most recently published GMAT score percentiles, which represent a sample of more than 700,000 students who took the GMAT from 2014-2017.



How do you figure out what your GMAT percentiles are? After all, there’s a lot to take in when assessing your GMAT scores and decoding your GMAT score report.

First off, you’ve got a raw score in both the Verbal and Quantitative sections. Then there’s the ever-confusing Integrated Reasoning score. Then, you’ve got an Analytical Writing score. And, if you’re still with me, there’s the Total Score! So what precisely matters when it comes to GMAT score percentiles?

We know it’s hard to keep your brain from seeping out your ears when trying to get a handle on your score report, but we’ve broken down everything you need to know about GMAT score percentiles in the following tables and explanations.

The Basics of GMAT Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT Score Percentiles Chart[/*]
[*]GMAT Quant Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT Verbal Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT AWA Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT IR Percentiles[/*]
[*]How Does GMAT Calculate Percentiles?[/*]
[*]GMAT Percentiles for Top Schools[/*]
[*]Takeaways about GMAT Percentiles[/*]
[/list]
retake the GMAT (and, unfortunately, pay the GMAT exam fee once more).

Knowing the percentiles lets you know if you’ve merely achieved an average GMAT score, or if you’ve shot through the roof with your scores. GMAC produces this information on GMAT score percentiles tables, and for your convenience, we’ve broken these scores down below.



information on GMAT score calculations!)

PercentileScorePercentile (cont'd.)Score (cont'd.)

99%760-80031%520

98%75029%510

97%74027%500

95%73025%490

94%72023%480

90%71021%470

88%70018%460

85%69017%450

82%68015%440

80%67014%430

77%66012%420

73%65011%410

68%64010%400

66%6309%390

63%6208%380

59%6107%370

56%6007%360

52%5906%350

49%5805%340

46%5704%320-330

42%5603%290-310

39%5502%250-280

37%5401%220-240

33%5300%200-210













averge GMAT scores for top programs. As you can see from running down this list, they all tend to be above 700–sometimes well above 700, as in the case of Columbia (736–wow!).

Put this in terms of percentiles using the chart above. A 700 on the GMAT is in the 88th percentile, while a 736 would be around the 96th percentile. From this information, we can draw the conclusion that top schools need top scores.

Rankings don’t correspond precisely to score percentiles–but in this case, it’s pretty fair to say that if you’re applying to a top-10 school, a score in the top 10% of GMAT test-takers (i.e. placing you in the 90th percentile above) is definitely a helpful tool.

At this point, you may be wondering about the number of test-takers who get each top scores each year–what’s the competition like? Some simple calculations can help us figure this out. If around 250,000 test-takers take the exam each year (as they did in 2017-2018), that means around:

  • 2,500 scored between 760-800 (99th percentile)
  • 2,500 scored between 750-760 (98th percentile)
  • 25,000 scored between 700-750 (88th-98th percentile)
Starting to see a trend? Yep! The GMAT scores fall along a bell curve: very few people with very high or very low scores, and most people falling somewhere in the middle. In fact, the GMAC tells us that around two-thirds of test takers score between 400 and 600 on the exam.



How to Understand Your GMAT Score Percentiles appeared first on Magoosh GMAT Blog.
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How to Understand Your GMAT Percentiles [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: How to Understand Your GMAT Percentiles
This post has been updated to include GMAC’s most recently published GMAT score percentiles, which represent a sample of more than 700,000 students who took the GMAT from 2014-2017.



How do you figure out what your GMAT percentiles are? After all, there’s a lot to take in when assessing your GMAT scores and decoding your GMAT score report.

First off, you’ve got a raw score in both the Verbal and Quantitative sections. Then there’s the ever-confusing Integrated Reasoning score. Then, you’ve got an Analytical Writing score. And, if you’re still with me, there’s the Total Score!

So what precisely matters when it comes to GMAT score percentiles?

We know it’s hard to keep your brain from seeping out your ears when trying to get a handle on your score report, but we’ve broken down everything you need to know in the following tables and explanations.

The Basics of GMAT Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT Score Percentiles Chart[/*]
[*]GMAT Quant Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT Verbal Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT AWA Percentiles[/*]
[*]GMAT IR Percentiles[/*]
[*]How Does GMAT Calculate Percentiles?[/*]
[*]GMAT Percentiles for Top Schools[/*]
[*]Takeaways about GMAT Percentiles[/*]
[/list]
retake the GMAT (and, unfortunately, pay the GMAT exam fee once more).

Knowing the percentiles lets you know if you’ve merely achieved an average GMAT score, or if you’ve shot through the roof with your scores. GMAC produces this information on GMAT score percentiles tables, and for your convenience, we’ve broken these scores down below.



information on GMAT score calculations!)

Click here for the GMAT Score Percentiles Chart

PercentileScorePercentile (cont'd.)Score (cont'd.)

99%760-80031%520

98%75029%510

97%74027%500

95%73025%490

94%72023%480

90%71021%470

88%70018%460

85%69017%450

82%68015%440

80%67014%430

77%66012%420

73%65011%410

68%64010%400

66%6309%390

63%6208%380

59%6107%370

56%6007%360

52%5906%350

49%5805%340

46%5704%320-330

42%5603%290-310

39%5502%250-280

37%5401%220-240

33%5300%200-210

 













averge GMAT scores for top programs. As you can see from running down this list, they all tend to be above 700–sometimes well above 700, as in the case of Columbia (736–wow!).

Put this in terms of percentiles using the chart above. A 700 on the GMAT is in the 88th percentile, while a 736 would be around the 96th percentile. From this information, we can draw the conclusion that top schools need top scores.

Rankings don’t correspond precisely to score percentiles–but in this case, it’s pretty fair to say that if you’re applying to a top-10 school, a score in the top 10% of GMAT test-takers (i.e. placing you in the 90th percentile above) is definitely a helpful tool.

At this point, you may be wondering about the number of test-takers who get each top scores each year–what’s the competition like? Some simple calculations can help us figure this out. If around 250,000 test-takers take the exam each year (as they did in 2017-2018), that means around:

  • 2,500 scored between 760-800 (99th percentile)
  • 2,500 scored between 750-760 (98th percentile)
  • 25,000 scored between 700-750 (88th-98th percentile)
Starting to see a trend? Yep! The GMAT scores fall along a bell curve: very few people with very high or very low scores, and most people falling somewhere in the middle. In fact, the GMAC tells us that around two-thirds of test takers score between 400 and 600 on the exam.



How to Understand Your GMAT Percentiles appeared first on Magoosh GMAT Blog.
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How to Calculate GMAT Scores [#permalink]
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FROM Magoosh Blog: How to Calculate GMAT Scores


Photo by Kelly Sikkema

Need to calculate a potential GMAT score from a practice test? Are you looking to retake the GMAT and wondering what score to aspire to? When you take the official GMAT, you’ll see your sectional and overall scores immediately.

But what should you do if you’re taking a at home? How can you calculate your GMAT score?

Magoosh has the only GMAT score calculator you need! First, enter your Verbal and Quant scores in the calculator below.

Calculate!

 

Then, read on for more about how your GMAT score is calculated, what your quant score and verbal score mean, how business schools use the GMAT test, and more!

How does GMAT scoring work?
On the GMAT, you’ll answer questions in four sections: Verbal, Quantitative, Integrated Reasoning, and the AWA.

The number of questions you answered correctly in Verbal and Quant are then turned into a score of 0-60 in each section.

Finally, these 0-60 scores are combined and scaled to give you your overall score on a 200-800 scale.

In other words, the “total” GMAT score report only combines your Verbal and Quantitative section scores, but doesn’t take your IR or AWA scores into account. Remember this key fact as we take a closer look at GMAT scoring, because you’re going to see a lot of different score types!

GMAT Score Calculator
Calculate!

 

How accurate is this GMAT score calculator?
The GMAC is very tight-lipped about their scoring algorithm.

However, we’ve taken a look at our previous students’ scores and have found that this app calculated GMAT scores with reasonable accuracy on the 200-800-scale. This GMAT score calculator is not a perfect predictor, but it is a pretty good estimator.

Remember, your score may vary depending on which GMAT (or GMAT practice test) you take.

GMAT Score Chart
If you want to take a closer look at how we’ve predicted the 0-60 sectional scores to an overall, 200-800 point GMAT score, here’s a handy table you can review!

V
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38

Q
%
40%
44%
47%
52%
57%
59%
62%
66%
69%
71%
76%
81%
83%
85%

30
19%
470
480
490
500
500
510
520
530
530
540
550
560
560
570

31
20%
480
490
500
500
510
520
530
530
540
550
560
560
570
580

32
22%
480
490
500
500
510
520
530
530
540
550
560
560
570
580

33
25%
500
500
510
520
530
530
540
550
560
560
570
580
580
580

34
26%
500
510
520
530
530
540
550
560
560
570
580
580
590
600

35
28%
510
520
530
530
540
550
560
560
570
580
580
590
600
600

36
31%
520
530
530
540
550
560
550
570
580
580
590
600
610
610

37
34%
530
530
540
550
560
560
570
580
580
590
600
610
610
620

38
36%
530
540
550
560
560
570
580
580
590
600
610
610
620
640

39
37%
540
550
560
560
570
580
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640

40
41%
550
560
560
570
580
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640

41
43%
560
560
570
580
580
590
600
610
610
610
620
640
640
650

42
45%
560
550
580
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
650

43
50%
570
580
580
590
600
610
610
610
630
640
640
650
660
670

44
52%
580
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
680

45
57%
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680

46
60%
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690

47
63%
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
650
660
670
680
690
690

48
69%
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
680
680
690
690
700

49
75%
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710

50
86%
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
710
710
720

51
96%
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710
720
720

 

V
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51

Q
%
89%
91%
94%
96%
96%
98%
99%
99%
99%
99%
99%
99%
99%

30
19%
580
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670

31
20%
580
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670

32
22%
590
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680

33
25%
600
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690

34
26%
610
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690

35
28%
610
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700

36
31%
620
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710

37
34%
630
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710
720

38
36%
640
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710
720
720

39
37%
640
650
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710
720
720
730

40
41%
650
660
670
680
680
690
690
700
710
720
720
730
740

41
43%
660
670
670
680
690
690
700
710
720
720
730
740
750

42
45%
670
670
680
680
690
700
710
710
720
730
740
750
750

43
50%
670
680
690
690
700
710
720
720
730
740
750
750
760

44
52%
680
690
690
700
710
720
720
730
740
750
750
760
770

45
57%
690
690
700
710
720
720
730
740
740
750
760
770
780

46
60%
690
700
710
720
720
730
740
750
750
760
770
780
780

47
63%
700
710
720
720
730
740
750
750
760
770
780
780
790

48
69%
710
710
720
740
740
750
750
760
760
780
780
790
800

49
75%
720
730
740
740
750
750
760
770
780
780
780
780
800

50
86%
720
730
740
750
750
760
770
770
780
790
800
800
800

51
96%
730
740
750
750
760
770
780
780
790
800
800
800
800

How do I read the GMAT score chart?
Use this chart to find out how your section scores create your overall score. This way, you can see what score you need in each section to calculate your dream GMAT score.

For example, different combinations of Verbal and Quant scores can be mixed to get you an overall score of 700–see what section you’re strongest in and aim to boost your score as much as possible in this area to get the overall score you want.

With that said, Verbal scores do “count” for slightly more of the overall score (GMAT test-takers tend to be stronger in Quant), so work on boosting your score in this area to get the strongest possible overall score!

What are the percentiles along the rows and columns?
Since high Verbal scores “count” for slightly more than a high Quant score, a Verbal subscore of 40 would be in the 90th percentile, definitely in the top 10%. By contrast, a Quant subscore of 40 would be only the 39th percentile, not even in the top 50%!

The two subscores are definitely not equivalent.

This in part reflects a vast asymmetry in the GMAT test-taking pool: many more GMAT takers in an international market excel in math and struggle in verbal, so commanding performances in math are reasonably common, whereas commanding performances in verbal are less frequent.

To see how your total score translates to your GMAT percentile, check out our article on calculating GMAT percentiles.

What will my official GMAT score report look like?
After you take the exam, your GMAT Score Report will have the following components:

  • Your Quantitative Score (0 to 60), with percentile
  • Your Verbal Score (0 to 60), with percentile
  • Your Total GMAT Score (200 to 800), with percentile
  • AWA Score (half-integers from 0 to 6), with percentile
  • Integrated Reasoning score (integer from 1 to 8)
Remember, the 0 to 60 scale is based on the number of questions you answered correctly in each section—it is not a simple “answers correct” number.

As soon as you finish your GMAT in the test center, you will get almost the entire GMAT score report right away—everything except your AWA score, because that requires a human grader to review it.

When you leave the high-security Pearson testing room, they immediately hand you a printout of your results before you even can retrieve your stuff from the lockers.

Then, about 20 days later, you will get the whole shebang, everything you already know plus the essay results, either electronically or by snail mail, whichever you chose.

The total GMAT score report sent to adcoms will include all GMATs you have taken in the past five years, except the ones you have canceled. There is no trace of any cancellations on your score report (this last fact is new, a change from pre-2016 policy).

How does my GMAT score factor into admissions?
All scores, sectional and total, are reported to B-schools. However, the overall GMAT score is currently way more important in admissions than any of the other scores. The AWA & IR scores generally count for less. Still, that doesn’t mean you can ignore them! If you flub either one, admissions might see that as a red flag.

It’s important to note that your GMAT score is just one factor admissions committees at business schools use. Other factors include your previous relevant work experience, undergraduate academic performance, and your essays. If you want to see how your GMAT scores measure up, check out our post on evaluating good GMAT scores.

Obviously, the higher the score, the more options you will probably have. It may be that, to some extent, you can offset a lower college GPA with a stellar GMAT score report.

Solid GMAT exam prep, such as Magoosh, can raise your GMAT grade substantially.

In fact, Magoosh has a 50-point score increase guarantee: if you have already taken an official GMAT once, then Magoosh guarantees that if you use the product extensively, your score will increase by at least a minimum of 50 points (many users see much larger increases).

That’s extraordinary: such an increase can bring you from 660 (77th percentile = top 25%) to 710 (90th percentile = top 10%)!

By all means, strive to do the best you can do. At the same time, it’s important to be realistic about your abilities and the time & energy you have to prepare.

If your first GMAT score was a 460, then with concerned effort, you will be able to get up into the 500s and maybe even the 600s, but it may be that a GMAT score in the high 700s is unrealistic for you, and that’s OK.

Always strive for your personal best, it’s hard to compete with everyone out there.

The goal of the GMAT is to get you into business school; the goal of business school is to get an MBA; the goal of an MBA is to get into management positions in the business world.

Many folks who are wildly successful in upper management in the business world had less than stellar GMAT scores and went to less prestigious business schools.

Conversely, some folks are brilliant test takers and ace the GMAT, but then wind up not so successful in the rough and tumble business world.

A big part of success is being canny enough to know how to leverage your particular gifts to the greatest effect. Trust the unique combination of gifts and talents you bring, seek to learn the skills that will most complement and bring forth who you are, and learn to recognize the environments in which you can most effectively thrive.

Do the best you can do on the GMAT, and trust that this will be good enough to lead you to where you need to be in the big picture.

Should I retake the GMAT?
We have a few thoughts taking the GMAT again that can help you figure out whether to retake the exam—and help you ace the GMAT the next time around if you do. Business school admission is a competitive process; in order to compete well with the pool of applicants you will be up against, scoring above 600 will help your chances.



For more resources, I would recommend reading these following sites:

I’d love to hear what you think about this topic and our GMAT score calculator. Feel free to leave a comment below!

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