AjiteshArun
Rochix123
However, I found the following message on mba.com by the GMAT team.
"If you leave a question blank, you receive no credit for the item. However, if you answer a question and get it wrong, you get no credit and you are penalized a quarter of a point for five-option multiple-choice questions and one-third of a point for four-option questions."
So now I am extremely confused?
Hi
Rochix123,
That part of the article ("formula scoring") is about (many) standardised tests
other than the computer adaptive GMAT. In other words, they were not discussing the current GMAT in that part of the article. That's why they go on to say this:
Quote:
What about the computer adaptive GMAT™ exam? Should you guess? Formula scoring and the correction for guessing were designed for tests where all the items carry the same weight and where you are allowed to skip questions. Throw computerized adaptive testing into the mix and you have an altogether different picture.
AjiteshArun is spot-on here. The article is as clear as mud, unfortunately. There's no such thing as "formula scoring" on a computer adaptive test, and the article was written badly, so it's not obvious that they mentioned that type of scoring solely for the purpose of contrasting it with the actual GMAT scoring system.
Honestly, I would completely ignore this particular piece of silliness on the mba.com website. Sorry that it wasted a bit of your time and energy,
Rochix123!