-
bekkilyn
- Senior | Next Rank: 100 Posts
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Mon Oct 06, 2008 9:06 am
- Location: United States
- Thanked: 5 times
How costly are careless mistakes in the exam?
From reading GMAT forums about how the test works, it moves your score up and down depending on the questions you get right or wrong. Theoretically, if you miss a question, it will give you an easier question, and then if you get that question correct, it will bump you back up to a harder question, etc.
However, I have also read posts from people who would seem to have easy questions throughout the entire exam and then would end up getting a low score because the exam would never give them harder questions. Why does that happen?
If the algorithm works as above, then why would those people not get harder questions as the test progresses? Do they keep missing easy questions and keep getting their scores bumped down, or does the exam "give up" after a point once it thinks it knows your level and just continues to give you questions of that level no matter what?
From my study so far, I've found that I sometimes make careless errors, even on the easier questions, so I'm wondering just how costly missing one really would be on the exam, or if I'd have a chance to make up for that mistake assuming I get other questions correct?
From reading GMAT forums about how the test works, it moves your score up and down depending on the questions you get right or wrong. Theoretically, if you miss a question, it will give you an easier question, and then if you get that question correct, it will bump you back up to a harder question, etc.
However, I have also read posts from people who would seem to have easy questions throughout the entire exam and then would end up getting a low score because the exam would never give them harder questions. Why does that happen?
If the algorithm works as above, then why would those people not get harder questions as the test progresses? Do they keep missing easy questions and keep getting their scores bumped down, or does the exam "give up" after a point once it thinks it knows your level and just continues to give you questions of that level no matter what?
From my study so far, I've found that I sometimes make careless errors, even on the easier questions, so I'm wondering just how costly missing one really would be on the exam, or if I'd have a chance to make up for that mistake assuming I get other questions correct?

















