Studying for any major test is difficult, but the GMAT poses an especially difficult challenge. Rather than the fact-and-rote approach taken by most high school and early college testing, the GMAT tests an appropriate graduate-level set of skills - that of problem solving and contextual analysis. Ho...
Read more ›Successfully completing the GMAT to obtain the score you need requires a tiered plan of action developed over the months and weeks leading up to your scheduled test date. Integrating an effective time management strategy that works with your strengths is crucial.
Start early without time constraint...Read more ›Think of the Integrated Reasoning Section of the GMAT as a test to evaluate the applied version of the same skills the GMAT is designed to test overall. The GMAT is intended to assess your competence in analysis, writing, and quantitative reasoning as well as your reading and writing skills. In this...
Read more ›When confronting the quantitative section of the GMAT, there are two general areas of focus. The first is an awareness of your specific study habits and test-taking strengths and weaknesses. The second is knowledge of mathematics and peculiarities of the test itself. This guide concerns itself with ...
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