Revealed: 900 real Q&A from GMAT exam
The GMAT exam will add a new section on Integrated Reasoning in June this year. To help students, Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) has launched a study guide with real questions from past exams plus the new questions.
It also has an online companion to help students prepare for the Integrated Reasoning section, which will become part of the exam in June. The 13th Edition of The Official Guide for GMAT Review includes more than 900 real questions and answer explanations from past GMAT exams, including 205 that never before been released to the public.
A new chapter provides details about the new Integrated Reasoning section, as well as instructions on how to access an online study companion with 50 Integrated Reasoning questions and answer explanations. These questions simulate the actual Integrated Reasoning section, which includes questions that require you to toggle between multiple screens and manipulate data in tables and charts.
The guide also features comprehensive math and grammar reviews that cover concepts tested on the quantitative and verbal sections of the GMAT, plus a diagnostic exam to help you focus your test preparation. The guide includes more than 400 quantitative questions and answer-explanations and more than 400 verbal questions and answer explanations.
Beginning in June, the Analytical Writing Assessment section of the GMAT will include only one essay; the previous version of the test included two. The 13th edition of the guide, however, still has 135 essay topics with sample responses and scoring information to best help test-takers prepare for the exam.
"Introducing the Indian edition of the guide, at a special price reflects our commitment to this unique and very important market-- the 3rd largest pool of GMAT test takers in the world", said Dr. David A. Wilson, CEO of GMAC as he unveiled the new Indian Edition. The guide is priced at Rs 1,499.
GMAC is a nonprofit organization of leading business schools around the world that owns the GMAT. In India, the GMAT is accepted for admissions at over 150 programs offered at 73 business schools and is continuously available 17 test centers.
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