Yes, they are going to be looking for other measures of numeracy. And so if you have a B or better in stats calculus etc in academic setting then that will be serving as a proxy for your Quant score.
I would say this is more of an opportunity for someone who is really good at math but really can't get things figured out on the GMAT
It is really important that you have some type of proof that you're going to be able to handle the coursework.
If you don't have much for them to go on I would definitely recommend doing MBA math because you can complete that pretty quickly.
The idea is that they need to know that you will be able to handle the coursework because if you fail or drop out that's a real financial loss for them, on top of the negative juju.
If you're applying round 3 without a GMAT make sure to really flesh out all the areas of numeracy that you could point to- grades, alt transcript, but also maybe if you use quant skills in your job.
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Well, I think that the people who are going to benefit from this "gmat waiver" phenomenon are those with lower than the usual gmat average of the class (around 720 I think) , what I mean is it is a significant risk for kellogg to accept people with poor quant skills, and if they have an applicant with a 650<x<700 gmat with q47+ they might prefer him/her over a person who doesn't have a gmat , so those 150 places could "easily" be occupied by people who would otherwise hesitate to send an application+you have those who are in the WL.
Of course, there are exceptions , if a person has a strong quant background from a noticeable university then that is another story, it just looks really "weird" if they would just accept an individual who can't prove somehow his/her academic quant skills , but I would like to hear the opinion of
MBAPrepCoach on this matter.
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