The closely awaited day of the updated GMAT debut is Nov. 7 (the current GMAT is available too, until Jan 30, 2024). We were in London earlier this year at the official kick-off event and got to look behind the curtain. Here is our take on the situation and what it means to you.
The GMAT FOCUS structure
Quantitative Reasoning: 21 questions, 45 minutes (no data sufficiency)
Verbal Reasoning: 23 questions, 45 minutes (no sentence correction)
Data Insights: 20 questions, 45 minutes (mix of IR and data sufficiency)
There are two significant changes, the inclusion of Integrating Reasoning (IR) in the third section and the drop of sentence correction. Overall the test is a slightly longer version of the Executive Assessment (EA) that we have been teaching for years.
The time
2:15 is the overall length. GMAT says this is shorter than the current test. However, this is not really true. The scoring part of the GMAT only included Verbal and Quant and was just over two hours. Many test-takers skipped the essay and IR, so it’s not really shorter
The essay gets dropped.
Good riddance. A small minority of our clients wrote it. It was a waste of time that nobody cared about. The schools have their own essays as part of the application. The AWA was scored separately and did not affect the score. We have been advising to skip it for years.
IR counts
We wondered if this would happen. IR appears in the Data Insights section with data sufficiency. This is a highly trainable section that is arguably more relevant to modern analytical work. This move makes sense to us, but there are many types of charts and questions to prepare for.
Sentence Correction is gone.
This was the part of the test that was most easily improved. We are sorry to see it go. Our students improved English skills and used this section to achieve higher scores. This means that there is no grammar component to GMAT anymore.
The scoring, and what is means to applicants.
The scoring will be "recalibrated" on the new test. At present, almost 20% of GMAT scores are 700+. On the Focus, a 705 (Focus scores will end with "5") will be in the top 98th percentile. A 615 on the Focus will be a good score! We would bet that there will be an adjustment period before a "good" score is determined. The scores will "look" low and this concerns us.
Tthe classic version will be taken down on Jan. 30, 2024. Applicants should take the test now because in our view the changes are cosmetic and are unlikely to truly benefit the applicant. The time of the test is actually longer than the previous version not counting the non-scoring sections (IR + AWA).
The loss of sentence correction is an easy source of points. The inclusion of IR type questions is overall a student friendly development. However, The actual form and scoring weight of these questions is yet to be observed in practice
The scoring is also a black box, especially how schools will use the scores. We saw that with EA it took years for meaningful statistics to emerge. The IR never succeeded in achieving admissions relevant correlations to score.
Bottom line: Take the test now.
There will be a transition period of uncertainty until study materials can be developed to a high level of accuracy and statistics interpreted.