Sunday | May 26, 2013

 

 

call_sms

Wisdom Mart

Want an MBA Degree that is

Universally Recognized?

Taking GMAT is the first step towards that goal. With Wisdom Mart's superior guidance and experienced faculty you can also joing the ranks of the elites, get an MBA degree from Wharton, Harward or Lundon Universities

know how
got a gmat admission question

that petrifies you?

Take help directly from the Admission Director of ISB and other Top B-schools. Questions pertaining to financial aid or interview questions or admission procedure, we will help you through all.

know how
Confused as to which college

is best for you?

Our Experts care always ready to help you get to your dream college by following an accurate process of elimination to decide on where to apply so as to increase your probability of admission.

know how
Wisdom Mart- Delhi's No 1 

institute for

GMAT, GRE, SAT, TOEFL, IELTS and Admission and Visa Counselling, but that is not all we do in Wisdom Mart, we don't rest till we see you through to your destined college.

know how
Specialized Preparation for

GRE, GMAT, SAT, TOEFL, IELTS

Test & Admissions Abroad. Whether its visa guidance, admission counselling, essay/SOP/LOR editing, practice tests, learning procedures, or study material Wisdom Mart is the place to be.

know how
Call us today to get a Free

demo class

for GMAT, GRE, SAT, TOEFL, IELTS and experience the difference of study environment in Wisdom Mart. Do not accept life as it comes to you, make it come as you expect it to. Wisdom Mart, your Way to Success.

know how
Through with GMAT?

Get ready for the next step

Selecting the right management school among top ranked schools is just the tip of the ice-berg, there are lot more variables present thats needs to be considered before choosing the right college and this is where Wisdom Mart excels at.

know how
learn. practice. test.

Online!

6 Full-length tests, 30+ Quizzes, 30+ Practice tests, 200+ Flash Cards, 110+ topics on Quant and Verbal, 1500+ Practice Questions, 1000+ Video Sessions, 30+ counselors, 24X7 access for GRE, GMAT, SAT.

know how
Quant
PDF Print E-mail
Article Index
Quant
Problem Solving
Data Sufficiency
All Pages

Quantitative Section

The quantitative section consists of 37 multiple choice questions, which must be answered within 75 minutes. There are two types of questions: problem solving and data sufficiency. The quantitative section is scored from 0 to 60 points. Over the 3 years ending in October 2009, the mean score has been 35.8/60; scores above 50 and below 7 are rare.

Practice Questions:

  • Problem Solving
  • Data Sufficiency

 


 

Problem Solving

This tests the quantitative reasoning ability of the examinee. Problem-solving questions present multiple-choice problems in arithmetic, basic algebra, and elementary geometry. The task is to solve the problems and choose the correct answer from among five answer choices. Some problems will be plain mathematical calculations; the rest will be presented as real life word problems that will require mathematical solutions.

Numbers: All numbers used are real numbers.

Figures: The diagrams and figures that accompany these questions are for the purpose of providing useful information in answering the questions. Unless it is stated that a specific figure is not drawn to scale, the diagrams and figures are drawn as accurately as possible. All figures are in a plane unless otherwise indicated.

 


 

Data Sufficiency

This tests the quantitative reasoning ability using an unusual set of directions. The examinee is given a question with two associated statements that provide information that might be useful in answering the question. The examinee must then determine whether either statement alone is sufficient to answer the question; whether both are needed to answer the question; or whether there is not enough information given to answer the question.

Data sufficiency is a unique type of math question created especially for the GMAT. Each item consists of the questions itself followed by two numbered statements.

  • If statement 1 alone is sufficient to answer the question, but statement 2 alone is not sufficient.
  • If statement 2 alone is sufficient to answer the question, but statement 1 alone is not sufficient.
  • If both statements together are needed to answer the question, but neither statement alone is sufficient.
  • If either statement by itself is sufficient to answer the question.
  • If not enough facts are given to answer the question.

Perhaps the easiest way to fully internalize the scope of these questions is to replace the word “is” with the words “must be” – the questions are not asking whether an answer is possible, but rather, whether it "must" be the case.