MGMAT RC - recruitment and development

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MGMAT RC - recruitment and development

by hk_4u » Mon Feb 01, 2010 9:16 am
The recruitment and development of talent is a growing priority for many organizations, and is increasingly regarded as an important competitive advantage. One example of this emphasis on talent development is the creation of so-called 'C' level executive roles--Chief Talent or Personnel Officer--that represent the interests of the Human Resources department. This is a significant change from past years, during which Human Resources was generally considered a lower priority, even a necessary evil, and a destination for executives that did not thrive in other departments.
This change has had an important beneficiary--women. An extraordinarily high proportion of Human Resources departments are run by women, reflecting the composition of the departments themselves. For better or worse, Human Resources positions have long been perceived as natural roles for women, as women are generally regarded as more nurturing and service-oriented than their male counterparts. As these traits are considered core to the functioning of effective Human Resources personnel, the advancement of women within HR departments has been routine and that, in turn, has attracted more women. Additionally, the lifestyle of workers in the Human Resources department is often not as demanding in terms of hours and weekends worked as it is for workers in other departments; many women with children find this appealing.
The preponderance of female heads of Human Resources departments and the higher prioritization of talent development have combined to give many female executives increased authority and influence. Many women, after performing well in a Human Resources capacity, have been given additional responsibilities in other departments. Also, more female executives have been asked to represent their organizations at industry conferences, further increasing their visibility.


The tone of the passage suggests that the author regards the changes described in the passage as:
A - overdue redress for issues historically faced by women
B - a natural result of business and personnel trends
C - an unfortunate continuation of pervasive misconceptions
D - a necessary step in the realignment of management
E - a formidable new impediment to social changes

OA - B ; Why not E ?

The passage suggests which of the following about the "additional responsibilities" cited in the second sentence of the third paragraph?
A - They are probably in areas not as traditionally associated with female leadership.
B - They are in departments that used to be run by a man.
C - They are similar to responsibilities that these women have already successfully undertaken.
D - They include speaking at industry conferences on behalf of these women's organizations.
E - They are more important than these women's prior responsibilities in the Human Resources area.

OA - A ; Why not C ?
Source: — Reading Comprehension |

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by Osirus@VeritasPrep » Mon Feb 01, 2010 10:30 am
With the tone question. The answer is B because of the very first sentence of the passage. That sentence implies that it is a natural evolution of business and organizational structure. E is wrong because impediment is a negative thing. The passage is positive about the changes.

With the second question, the answer is A because the implication is that these new roles in other departments would not be associated with female leadership, since the passage states that female leadership is only dominant in Human Resources. C is incorrect because they would not have stressed the women taking leadership roles in other departments if it is similar to what these women were already doing. Additionally, there is no other department that is really similar to Human Resources within a corporation.

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by Osirus@VeritasPrep » Mon Feb 01, 2010 10:35 am
What level question was that? 600-700?

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by hk_4u » Tue Feb 09, 2010 9:32 pm
Still not convinced by the answer of the 2nd question

How can you conclude that additional responsibilities are probably in OTHER areas than HR.

This is what the passage says
An extraordinarily high proportion of Human Resources departments are run by women, reflecting the composition of the departments themselves.
Many women, after performing well in a Human Resources capacity, have been given additional responsibilities in other departments.
I thought ,since women have performed will in a certain kind of job in HR , they are asked to a similar job in other dept as well . AND chose option C.
Now I realize this is what Stacey terms as RWP - real word plausible - seems correct by common sense but not supported by the passage.

How is option A supported by the passage ?

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by hk_4u » Tue Feb 09, 2010 9:45 pm
one more Q

The tone of the passage suggests that the author regards the changes described in the passage as:
overdue redress for issues historically faced by women
a natural result of business and personnel trends
an unfortunate continuation of pervasive misconceptions
a necessary step in the realignment of management
a formidable new impediment to social changes

OA - B

I got it using POE as other other options can be discarded. However not sure whether is it the real tone of the passage

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by ballubalraj » Tue Feb 09, 2010 9:52 pm
hk_4u wrote:Still not convinced by the answer of the 2nd question

How is option A supported by the passage ?
The passage says:
Many women, after performing well in a Human Resources capacity, have been given additional responsibilities in other departments. Also, more female executives have been asked to represent their organizations at industry conferences, further increasing their visibility.
It clearly states that after performing well in their 'rotuine' HR dept., they have been given additional responsibilties in 'other departments'. The following senetnce too supports the option 'A' which says that more female executives have been asked to represent the organization at industry level, to increase their visibility. This implies that their visibility was less when women were only in HR dept.

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by Stacey Koprince » Thu Feb 11, 2010 1:02 pm
Received a PM asking me to respond. This post will cover the first ("tone") question.

First, a caveat: there are very few tone questions on the official test. If tone questions are giving you trouble, I wouldn't worry about it too much, simply because they're infrequent.

So, tone is typically about whether the author is generally positive, negative, or neutral about something. The first paragraph is pretty neutral - it's describing a phenomenon without telling us what the author really thinks. Para 2 is more on the positive side - the change helped women a lot. Para 3 is more of the same.

E (the one you asked about): a formidable new impediment to social changes
impediment = something that prevents something else from occurring (or makes it much harder)
so the full idea would be:
The changes in the passage will make it much harder for some other social changes to happen.

Does the passage discuss future, potential social changes? No. It only discusses a trend that has been happening in the recent past. In addition, the author doesn't raise the issue of how the past change might make it harder for anything else to happen in future.
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by Stacey Koprince » Thu Feb 11, 2010 1:13 pm
This post is about the 2nd question ("responsibilities").

They tell us exactly where to go! Great! 2nd sent of 3rd para: "Many women, after performing well in a Human Resources capacity, have been given additional responsibilities in other departments."

This is an inference question ("suggests"), so what can we infer about these "additional responsibilities" mentioned in the sentence?

First, what does it mean (in GMAT terms) to make an inference? On the GMAT, that means something that must be true according to the info given in the passage - not just something that might possibly be true.

MUST it be true according to the passage that, as choice C says, the new responsibilities are similar to "old responsibilities?" It might be true, sure, but the passage doesn't give any support at all for this idea, so we can't infer that from the passage.

What about the correct answer, A? The passage previously established that HR is associated with female leadership. This sentence says that the new responsibilities are in "other departments" - that is, not the HR department. So, are the new responsibilities probably in other areas ("other departments") not as traditionally associated with female leadership? If the new responsibilities are NOT in the traditionally-female-led HR department, then they will "probably" be in areas that are "not as traditionally associated with female leadership."
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