Time your CAT well

Time your CAT well

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Updated on Oct 23, 2009 05:47 IST
<p style="text-align: justify;">Strategy plays a key role in CAT as the test has been a low-scoring paper that asks you to maximise the overall score while clearing the cutoffs or qualifying scores in each section. While a student's overall strategy should be unique for him/her, there are some general principles that s/he needs to apply. I'll start with the oft-asked question, "How do I split my time?" Divide the time among all sections. I suggest 35 X 3 and a 30-minute buffer. This is critical for three reasons.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">1 It ensures that the last section does not suffer.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">2 In case of bad performance in any section, it allows you to recover some ground and hopefully cross the cutoff.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">3 In case all sections are okay and you have some time left, you can allocate it to the section that lets you maximise your score. This <img style="border: 3px solid black; margin: 3px 4px; float: right;" src="https://images.shiksha.com/mediadata/images/1256300118phpU0zNFs.jpeg" alt="" width="132" height="151">can be done best at the end as you have seen all the sections.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Start with a section that you are good at. A bad start lowers morale and eventually even sections which you are good at will suffer, too. Experiment with various combinations before deciding what works best for you.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Some of the common errors that students make include:</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">1 Not even looking at some questions. By doing this, you may miss some easy questions. So, look at all questions</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">2 Not giving up on a question, when you can't solve it. After a minute or so, if it appears that you are not making any progress, quit and move on.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">3 Not using the answer choices. Every CAT paper I have seen had at least three questions that could be solved by intelligent substitution of the answer choices back into the question. Substitution of carefully chosen numbers can help you solve a number of questions.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Author: Ulhas Vairagkar</strong></p> <p><strong>Date: 21st Oct., 2009</strong></p> <hr /> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>For further details about related courses and colleges please click below:</strong></span></p> <p><a title="Related courses and institutes" href="https://management.shiksha.com/">Related courses and colleges</a></p>

Strategy plays a key role in CAT as the test has been a low-scoring paper that asks you to maximise the overall score while clearing the cutoffs or qualifying scores in each section. While a student's overall strategy should be unique for him/her, there are some general principles that s/he needs to apply. I'll start with the oft-asked question, "How do I split my time?" Divide the time among all sections. I suggest 35 X 3 and a 30-minute buffer. This is critical for three reasons.

1 It ensures that the last section does not suffer.

2 In case of bad performance in any section, it allows you to recover some ground and hopefully cross the cutoff.

3 In case all sections are okay and you have some time left, you can allocate it to the section that lets you maximise your score. This can be done best at the end as you have seen all the sections.

Start with a section that you are good at. A bad start lowers morale and eventually even sections which you are good at will suffer, too. Experiment with various combinations before deciding what works best for you.

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Some of the common errors that students make include:

1 Not even looking at some questions. By doing this, you may miss some easy questions. So, look at all questions

2 Not giving up on a question, when you can't solve it. After a minute or so, if it appears that you are not making any progress, quit and move on.

3 Not using the answer choices. Every CAT paper I have seen had at least three questions that could be solved by intelligent substitution of the answer choices back into the question. Substitution of carefully chosen numbers can help you solve a number of questions.

 

Author: Ulhas Vairagkar

Date: 21st Oct., 2009


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