Showing posts with label GMAT essay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GMAT essay. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

How to analyze an essay topic

How to analyze an essay topic.
Here is one

The following appeared as part of a memo from the manager of an automobile manufacturing company.

Because the demand for our automobiles is expected to increase dramatically, we need to open a new manufacturing plant as soon as possible in order to continue o thrive. Our marketing projections indicate that 80 million people will want to buy our automobiles. Yet our existing plant can only produce 40 million automobiles. The new plant can be opened on a part time
basis, with workers from our existing site rotating responsibilities, until an operational staff can be trained. A major airplane manufacturer was extremely successful using this rotating strategy when it opened its new plan five years ago.

Preliminary notes
How dramatic is the increase? the analogy is faulty- comparison between airplane manufacturing and automobile manufacturing- does rotation work strategy work here? Marketing projections can be exaggerations- ill defined premises- how did the company estimate the demand, can the volume increase achievable in the given time. How realistic is the projection? Is there no completion for the company?


Flaws in the argument.
80million want to buy our autombile.(on what basis the projection is made).
Are current Workers willing to work extra time(an assumption is made).
Follow the airplane manfacturers strategy(faulty analogy may not work).
Undermining competitors marketing strategy.
Assumes the markets wont change.
...

For more argument analysis visit: http://www.semanticslearning.com/gmatessay-and-IR-tips.asp




Saturday, September 5, 2009

Brainstorming for GMAT essays


Issue topic: “Facts are stubborn things. They cannot be altered by our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions.”

Preliminary notes: what is a fact? Is it truth, reality, belief? Proven? Can’t facts be changed? If facts depict reality, they can’t be changed. For instance: Who cut own the tree- we may believe the forest dept did; the reality is something else, the rosewood smugglers did it. So if fact is belief, facts are not stubborn, can change, but reality is stubborn, so if fact is reality, then it is stubborn. Another instance: the earth was believed to be flat which later proved to be wrong. If fact is belief, it is subjected to change…
thus we can debate the statement from both perspectives. The statement is agreeable or disagreeable based on the definition of ‘fact’.
Visit this place more topic brainstorming….
visit www.semanticslearning.com for more details

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Take charge of your GMAT prep

  1. Study hard, no substitute for it. Study all areas of the GMAT.
  2. Take notes: the areas such as math, sentence correction and critical reasoning are concept intensive and logic driven. There is a lot for you to learn from the reference sources of these areas.  Make a note of all your trouble spots: Act on them within a week. if you cant help yourself, seek a professional trainer’s help to overcome the trouble areas.
  3. Always read the logic of every question that you attempt, even if the question was easy (you may find a different way of solving the question)
  4. If you tend to procrastinate, first thing is to book your test date. This will help you become serious for the rest of the prep period.
  5. Go through OG questions ( official guide) only after you are thorough with the concepts. Go through OG more than once. The logic of the questions, types of questions in the OG have a lot of transfer value.
  6. Write practice essays at least 10 each of issue and argument under timed conditions.
  7. Take at least 6 full GMAT exams( inclusive of the essays) to build stamina for a nearly 4 hr test.
  8. For the first timers at least 3 months of prep time ( with the right prep no room for repeat)
  9. Spend an average of 2-3 hrs per day; some of this time can be used for general reading( support for RC and essay)
  10. You are good at math is not necessarily synonymous with you are good at quantitative thinking.
  11. Brainstorm on as many essay topics as possible; consult experts for more ideas pertaining to abstract topics.
  12. Knowledge of idioms is a must for  significant improvement in sentence correction questions.
  13. Say no to hearsay: if some one says GMAT math is easy, double check, because he may have performed in the medium level test and scored not more than 580.Even the official guide doesn’t present questions of the highest difficulty possible.
  14. Vocabulary is not altogether unimportant; you must know, say, the meaning of ‘condescension or laudatory’ as the author’s tone and the difference  between ‘preface’ and ‘foreword’ as the source of the passage; the emphasis is on functional diction.
  15. For success in critical reasoning there is lot to learn- types of logic, nature and components of arguments; strategy for categories of questions; you get them all at the click of a mouse.
Access  them; make success.