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GMAT, or the Graduate
Management Admission Test was created by business schools
to measure the skills necessary for a graduate student to succeed
in MBA programs. Studies show that this
test is the best indicator for success in such programs, and as a
result about 4000 programs in 1800 graduate schools around the
world use this test for admission decisions. If you want to get
into a Graduate Managerial Program, you need to score well on the
GMAT.
The
GMAT Prep community
provides you
with completely free tools to help you get results. Helping you
plan, prep and study for your GMAT test,
this community gives you everything from tips and tricks, 100s of
trivia questions, concept lessons and follow-up tests.
Specific
resources include help with…
- Analytical
Writing Assessment (AWA)
- Quantitative
Section
- Verbal
Section
Join the GMAT Preparation
community and access the free lessons
inside.
How can this community help me?
This LearnHub community offers help with GMAT preparation. Check out the specific AWA, Quantitative, and Verbal sections for lessons, tests, question banks, general tips, and more! This community is also populated with students who have previously taken the GMAT test who are willing to lend their wisdom.To access the
following free content, join
here.
Lessons and Tests for AWA:
| Lesson: GMAT AWA: Analysis of an Issue |
| Lesson: GMAT AWA: Analysis of an Argument |
| Lesson: GMAT AWA: Step by Step Guide to GMAT Issue Essay |
Access these AWA lessons by joining the community!
Lessons and
Tests for Quantitative:
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Problem Solving 1 | Test: Quantitative Problems |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Problem Solving 2 | Test: Quantitative Problems II |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Data Sufficiency | Test: Quantitative Problems III |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Strategies | |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: More Strategies | |
| Presentation: GMAT Quantitative: Data Sufficiency | Test: Data Sufficiency |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Sample Problems | |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Sample Problems 2 | |
| Lesson: GMAT Quantitative: Sample Problems 3 | |
Access these Reading lessons by joining the community!
Lessons and Tests for Verbal:
| Lesson: GMAT Verbal: Reading Comprehension | Test: Verbal Test I |
| Lesson: GMAT Verbal: Critical Reasoning | Test: Verbal Test II |
| Lesson: GMAT Prep: Sentence Correction | Test: Reading Comprehension I |
| Lesson: GMAT Verbal: Critical Reasoning | Test: Reading Comprehension II |
| Lesson: GMAT Verbal: More on Reading Comprehension | Test: Reading Comprehension III |
Access these Writing lessons by joining the community!
What is the
GMAT?
The GMAT is a standardized test that is offered on
computer only (although a paper-based test is offered a few times a
year in certain regions). The test measures your verbal,
quantitative and analytical writing skills. As such, it contains 3
sections, one per topic. The GMAT does
not measure anything about your business theory knowledge, job
skills, etc.
The format of the GMAT is as follows:
Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA) - You have to face 2 writing tasks.
Quantitative Section - This section contains 37 multiple choice questions of two types (which are intermingled with each other on the actual test).
Verbal
Section - 41 multiple choice questions of 3 different
types: A. Reading Comprehension, B. Critical Reasoning, and C.
Sentence Correction.
All information, lessons, and tests, as well as active GMAT experts are available to answer your questions through community Discussions. All this is available freely to members of the LearnHub GMAT Preparation community. So, why not:
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JohnPhilipGreen said – Fri, 26 Jun 2009 01:52:22 -0000 ( Flag Edit Link )
That’s interesting! I didn’t know there were schools that didn’t require the GMAT… nearly every one I’d come across did.