What can be expected on the D day

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What can be expected on the D day

by ayushiiitm » Sat May 29, 2010 5:23 am
Hi all,

I have been preparing for GMAT on my own.


I wanted to know, what all can be expected on d day other than the test.

What all things are needed to be carried. What all forms/formalities needed to be filled.
How many scratch papers are available. Are the scratch papers similar to work on, as we work on A4 size sheets.

What is it about sending score to 5 schools? I havent decided yeat and I am planning to use my GMAT score for appying for Phd probably. Is there a list available for potential Phd programs as well?
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by DAYNE » Sat May 29, 2010 9:53 am
all that info is available when you schedule your appointment at mba.com

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by ayushiiitm » Sat May 29, 2010 11:01 am
Thank you for that I already know.

I am looking forward to hear from people who have given the exam, or have some hand on regarding my queries like our instructors.
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by Dan@VinciaPrep » Mon May 31, 2010 3:39 am
ayushiiitm wrote:Hi all,

I have been preparing for GMAT on my own.


I wanted to know, what all can be expected on d day other than the test.

What all things are needed to be carried. What all forms/formalities needed to be filled.
How many scratch papers are available. Are the scratch papers similar to work on, as we work on A4 size sheets.

What is it about sending score to 5 schools? I havent decided yeat and I am planning to use my GMAT score for appying for Phd probably. Is there a list available for potential Phd programs as well?
1) You get five laminated sheets of paper- these sheets where a bit longer than A4 sheets of paper for me
2) the sheets were white, but had squares on them
3) you can search for the schools that you want to apply to by using a search option. I think that if you put in the first letter, a whole list of schools come up. It's better to figure out what schools you want to apply to beforehand
4) Yes, you can apply to PhD programs as well
5) Don't bring any notes to the test center- if they think that you are using your notes at the break they can cancel your school (which I don't think they would actually do, but better safe than sorry)
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by Brian@VeritasPrep » Tue Jun 01, 2010 11:32 am
Hey ayushiitm (and all),

Great questions - I've always found that you can tell a lot about the way the GMAT is written before you even click "Begin" on the AWA essays.

When you arrive at the test center, it will feel official and sterile...and, in some respects, it's like reporting for prison:

-They'll check your ID against your registration (make sure that your name is spelled the same, your birthdate is correct on both, etc.)
-They'll take a digital photograph of you for their records (your "mug shot")
-They'll take a fingerprint or palm scan (I believe that most centers are on palm scans now) for security purposes
-You'll be given a locker for anything other than, really, the clothes you have on - watches, cell phones, hats, jackets, etc. all go in the locker and you can only visit them during breaks
-Even during breaks, you need to get your prints taken when you return to your seat

Some of this is done for security reasons (it's a high stakes test, and you should be happy as an honest test-taker that you won't be competing against inflated-due-to-cheating scores), but I'd argue that a lot of it gets to the heart of the test, of which the mission is:

Determine which candidates will be the most successful b-school graduates

B-school graduates will go on to be managers: traders, CEOs, entrepreneurs, etc. In those capacities, you'll need to make sound, reasoned decisions under pressure - there will be thousands, if not millions, of dollars at stake; your employees and clients will depend on your decisions; your career may be defined on your choices; and you may have limited time or incomplete information. The GMAT tries to replicate that by adding pressure up front on the check-in, and by asking you to make a series of logical, comprehensive decisions under timed and high-stakes pressure.

So...know going into the test that they want you to feel pressure. I remember telling myself, actually, that the very fact that they had to go to such lengths to artificially create pressure (really? fingerprints?) was a signal that the questions themselves couldn't be that hard...if they need the pressure to keep my score down, than in the absence of pressure my score would be higher, right? So I used the pressure to my advantage - I saw behind the curtain and called their bluff on the difficulty level, and at the very least countered their artificial pressure with artificial confidence.

Good luck!
Brian Galvin
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Chief Academic Officer
Veritas Prep

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by ayushiiitm » Thu Jun 03, 2010 9:53 am
Thanks Brian, thats what should be the way to see things.

Great post as always
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