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GMAT Math Section

Next comes the first of the multiple choice portions of the test, the Quantitative section. here, you'll be given 75 minutes to respond to 37 questions testing math skills and quantitative reasoning. You will see one question on the screen at a time, and you must answer that question before the computer will allow you to move on to the next. No calculators are allowed on the GMAT, but you will have a scratch paper if and when you need to calculate. Tested subject matter includes arithmetic (percents, ratios, rates), algebra, number properties (prime numbers, fractions, etc.) and geometry. These subjects are tested using two different question-types that are distributed more or less at random across the section:
  • Problem Solving is the traditional multiple choice math question. Below you'll find the questions from the mini diagnostic, and strategies to give you a sense of how to succeed with this question type. More about: GMAT Problem Solving
  • Data Sufficiency is the most challenging math on the GMAT because it asks you not to solve a problem, but to determine whether or not it can be solved. We cover this question type in detail and help you understand how you can exploit this question type's structure to have a competitive advantage. More about GMAT Data Sufficiency

Next: Verbal Section


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