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Scott Simons
GMAT Tutor
  Personal Math Score: 770
· 16 years in test preparation
·
9 years as a private GMAT tutor
·
Authored test prep materials
· Taught more than 500 students


Score Increase After Integrated Learning:
50 Points
 
  It was a pleasure working with my tutor. Without him, I wouldn't have been able to hit my target score and get into my first choice for business school. His lesson plans, sample questions, and way of simplifying difficult concepts were invaluable to me. I only had a couple of weeks and I was able to increase my GMAT score 50 points.  
—Tiffany W.
Los Angeles
 
THE COMPUTER ADAPTIVE TEST (CAT)

 


If you have never taken a computer adaptive test before, it can certainly be frustrating and confusing. Once you practice, though, you'll see that it's just like any other exam: Frustrating and confusing, but doable.

The CAT has a database of thousands of questions to choose from. It builds your exam specifically for you based on your current performance. That means that it grades your exam question by question, and tries to give you questions you will be able to answer. The better you do, the harder the questions will become, and vice versa.

The catch is that when you get easier questions, you get a lower score. It is therefore important to do as well as possible on each question of the exam, so the computer will not give you easier questions.

While all this is true, students tend to psych themselves out when they take the exam. It is perfectly normal for the exam to give a test taker an easy question, or two or three in a row, just to give the impression of a poor performance, when, in fact, the test-taker is doing just fine. Smart test takers see easy questions as a gift of time, and do not try to interpret more than that.

Integrated Learning's tutors will help you master the CAT and all its intricacies and nuances, working with you on the skill and mindset you need to do well. You will learn how the test moves from question to question and you will be better prepared to read the test's signals, further empowering you to do well on the GMAT.

The GMAT CAT contains four sections:

1. Essay: Analysis of an issue 30 min
2. Essay: Analysis of an argument 30 min
3. Math (37 Questions) 75 min (1:15)
4. Verbal (41 Questions) 75 min (1:15)

For more information on the GMAT or to sign up for the test, please click here for the GMAT's official web site.

 
 
   
 

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