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Testimonials |
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"I simply want to recommend this company to other
test takers. If you are unable to raise your score, here is the right
place to perfect your stats. "
J. Shanghai
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GMAT CAT Versus Paper Based Test
We
should have not said more about GMAT Computer Adaptive Test. After all, the exam
has transformed to CAT format since 1998. However, most test prep companies
still use previous paper-based questions as the teaching materials. This often
misleads test takers to prepare for it like SAT in high school. Although most
questions remain the same, test-taking strategies and scoring policy are
basically different. This passage is to address the major differences between
these two formats, thus helping you develop a great strategy for highest
possible score.
You can no
longer make NOTE!
The greatest
disadvantage for CAT is that you can no longer make notes when you find words or
phrases in a long reading passage that are important to answer the following
questions. It is obvious that you can't draw on the computer screen. Though you
are given five to seven pieces of scratch paper, they are seldom useful, except
on Math Section. You should train yourself to memorize key words.
You can only answer one by one!
In a paper test,
you are smart to answer the easy questions first, and then the more difficult
ones. In the CAT test, however, you are unable to choose which question to
answer first. If you do not respond to an assigned question, the next one will
never come out. No matter how difficult it may be, you should pick up one among the
five.
All answers are final!
There are two
buttons you should click after you finish a question, one is "Next" and the
other is "Confirm". You should click the "confirm" button before the next
question comes out. Once you confirm, you can not go back to double check your
earlier answer. Therefore, in preparing for GMAT, you should get used to the way
of "all answers are final". In your mind, there should be only one button to
click, not two. There are approximately two minutes for each question.
It is the same for a whole section. If you finish a section before
time is up, you cannot go back to the previous section.
In other words, if you hurry and finish your
math section with 10 minutes
left, you can't take the time to the verbal section.
Not all questions count the same!
In the paper
test, every question counts the same score. In a CAT, it is not. Rather,
difficult question counts more. Before put into the database, each question
created by the test writers is assigned a difficult level score, ranging from 1
to 5. The higher the difficult level, the higher score you will achieve if you
answer correctly. The first question is in the middle level. If you answer
right, the next question presented will be more difficult and vice versus until
you finish the test. In other words, if the questions become more and more
difficult, you can expect to get a high score.
The first ten counts most!
The CAT puts much more value on the
first ten questions than the
later ones. Your "base" score is
determined by your performance on the first few questions.
Your score is then tuned by the
later questions. To get highest possible score, you
should spend more time on the earlier questions than the later questions.
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