Friday, August 21, 2020
Blog Archive GMAT Impact Integrated Reasoning Has Launched
Blog Archive GMAT Impact Integrated Reasoning Has Launched When it comes to the GMAT, raw intellectual horsepower helps, but it is not everything. In this weekly blog series, Manhattan GMATâs Stacey Koprince teaches you how to perform at your best on test day by using some common sense. Well, this is it: Integrated Reasoning (IR) finally launched this week, on June 5. Weâve been talking about IR a lot in recent weeks (see posts here, here, here, here, here and here), but I have a couple of things to add (or repeat) now that IR is live. (1) Do not stress about IR. For the first year, we expect the schools to gather data but not use it. They simply donât know enough about how to interpret the scores or how much emphasis to place on them during the admissions process. So for at least the next six months, IR is slightly more important than the essays but much less important than quant and verbal. (2) The major âdangerâ spot for IR right now is that we have to complete this section before we can get to quant and verbalâ"the main event. We do want to study IR enough that we wonât get either psyched out or tired out: know what the question types are, how to handle them in general, how to make educated guesses, how to handle the timing. Beyond that, donât even think about going for an amazing IR score or trying to get everything or almost everything right. (3) A lot of people view IR as an extra quant-based section, and if they donât like quant, theyâre pretty stressed about this new section. Actually, IR is a pretty even mix of quant and verbal, so if verbal is your strength, you will have an advantage on some of the questions in the section. Youâll be asked to make inferences, to strengthen or weaken something, and so on. Conversely, if quant is your strength, youâll also have some advantages from the start. Either way, youâll have some basis to feel not too terrible about IR. (4) When you first try a couple of these IR questions, youâre going to think, âWow! Thatâs really hard. These feel kind of bizarre!â Donât panic. I felt the same way when I first looked at IR questions. Theyâre different, thatâs all. Youâre going to have to get used to them, but you will, as long as youâre diligent in your study. In short, yes, youâre going to have to study for IR, but no, this is not going to completely derail your GMAT study. For IR, be prepared enough that you can answer some questions and guess on others without tiring yourself out or getting anxiousyou donât need a great score here. Quant and verbal are still your priorities. Good luck and happy studying! Share ThisTweet GMAT Impact
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