Interesting... I didn't realize that Kaplan and
MGMAT were sharing questions. Kaplan (which is, in turn, owned by the Washington Post) bought
Manhattan GMAT a few years ago, but they promised that they would keep the operations of the two companies separate. As far as I've been able to tell, the two companies are still taking very different approaches to their GMAT curriculum and materials, but maybe that's starting to change?
Historically, Kaplan and
MGMAT have employed very different question banks and algorithms on their CAT tests. Most of my students feel that both
MGMAT and Kaplan tests *feel* harder than the actual exam, but their scores tend to be much lower on the Kaplan tests. But again, maybe those score differences are vanishing if the companies are going through some sort of curriculum merger.
For what it's worth, the
MGMAT tests tend to be pretty accurate on average. But some students end up doing much better on the real thing than on
MGMAT CATs, and others do much worse, depending on how comfortable they are with
MGMAT's writing style.
But don't stress too much about the Kaplan scores--you'll meet plenty of people whose Kaplan scores were far lower than their actual scores on the GMAT.
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