The goal of the page is to give structure to the existing GMAT Content on the blog. As per the exam, the entire blog has been split into four parts. Three sections in GMAT Verbal and one section under Quantitative part of GMAT.
GMAT Verbal Content
The GMAT verbal section is further split into sentence correction, critical reasoning and reading comprehension.
Sentence Correction [Discontinued From Focus Edition 2024]
The most objective part of the entire verbal section, requires a combination of grammar and intended meaning.
Critical Reasoning
The second part of the exam where the intent is to critically evaluate the statements in terms of assumptions, weakening and strengthening of topics and so on.
Reading Comprehension
Reading comprehension is the last section, summing up the overall GMAT verbal section. Apparently, the most time consuming and the one that needs most practice for fast read through and taking generating summaries out of the topic.
GMAT Quantitative Content
The quantitative part of the GMAT, where the number of sub-topics and formulas/concepts to remember are the most. The questions belong to the subparts of problem-solving and data sufficiency.
- GMAT Problem Solving
- GMAT Data Sufficiency
- Circles
- Equations
- Exponents
- LCM and HCF
- Lines and Triangles
- Number Properties
- Prime Numbers
- Permutation and Combination
- Quadrilaterals and Polygons
GMAT Data Insights Content
This new section combines elements of the previous Integrated Reasoning section with modern data analysis skills:
- Data interpretation
- Statistical reasoning
- Business intelligence
- Decision-Making with data
The GMAT content has seen a slight change in type of topics with Sentence Correction discontinued in favour of Data Insights outlining the growing importance of Data & Interpretation!