- Alpha800
- Senior | Next Rank: 100 Posts
- Posts: 84
- Joined: Fri Jul 18, 2008 7:18 pm
- Location: Silicon Valley
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Hi All,
I'm wondering whether the content of questions asked on the GMAT is always true or not. I.e., during a SC problem, GMAT states that researchers found such and such. I know we're just grammatically correcting the sentence--so really the truth or falsity of the content is irrelevant--but I'm curious if all information used/cited by GMAT are true. Anyone know? Does GMAT ever make up false information while constructing their SC statements?
The one SC problem from OG11 which prompted my above question referred to researchers finding individuals who are blind from birth also gesture while speaking, and they do so even when communicating to another blind person.
I found this fascinating and am wondering if it is true or just something GMAT made up.
I'm wondering whether the content of questions asked on the GMAT is always true or not. I.e., during a SC problem, GMAT states that researchers found such and such. I know we're just grammatically correcting the sentence--so really the truth or falsity of the content is irrelevant--but I'm curious if all information used/cited by GMAT are true. Anyone know? Does GMAT ever make up false information while constructing their SC statements?
The one SC problem from OG11 which prompted my above question referred to researchers finding individuals who are blind from birth also gesture while speaking, and they do so even when communicating to another blind person.
I found this fascinating and am wondering if it is true or just something GMAT made up.












