This blog is dedicated to GMAT aspirants who want tips; strategies,practice questions,learning videos and study notes on how to tackle the Reading comprehension,Problem solving, Data sufficiency and critical reasoning section of the GMAT.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
GMAT reading comprehension - How to prepare Part 1
Comprehension: fix it
Every admission
test includes a section on passage comprehension, in which a test taker is
required to read, analyse and answer questions based on what is stated or
implied in the passage.
These questions are designed to test a
wide range of abilities pre-requisite to academic study at a higher level. Those abilities include:
- understanding the meaning of individual words, phrases and sentences with in the passage
- understanding the meaning and purpose of paragraphs and larger bodies of text
- distinguishing between specific details and meaty points
- summarizing a paragraph or an entire passage
- drawing conclusions from the given data
- reasoning out extended information
- understanding the structure of writing and organization of arguments
- identifying the author’s assumptions and opinions
- synthesizing various points coherently
- identifying strengths and weaknesses of a position
- developing and considering alternative explanations
- Gleaning the tone and tenor of the author
As this list implies, reading and
understanding a piece of text requires far more than a passive understanding of
the words and sentences it contains; it requires active engagement with the
text, asking questions, formulating and evaluating hypotheses and reflecting on
the relationship of the particular text to other texts and information.
Passages are generally drawn from the life sciences, arts, humanities and
everyday topics and are based on material found in books and periodicals, both
academic and nonacademic. Questions can
cover any of the topics listed above, from the meaning of a particular word to
assessing additional evidence that might support or weaken points made in the
passage. Mostly the questions are
standard multiple-choice questions, in which you are required to select a
single answer choice, and others ask you to select multiple answer choices........to be continued...in the next blog
Monday, May 26, 2014
Study these math problems and observe their solutions.
We have presented three math problems here..
These problems can be solved in more than one way.
Study these problems, observe their solutions.
We are sure you can replicate the solution process to other problems.
Version 1: questions 1 to 3
Visit semanticslearning.com , click on GMAT tips for solutions
Saturday, March 29, 2014
United Kingdom Visa
The new, improved UK visa centre in Chennai
Business or studies UK is a
destination that attracts Indians. To
meet the increasing demand with efficiency the UK visa application centre has
been recently upgraded. A new facility is the video conferencing booths for
visa interviews. The new ‘passport pass back’ service allows applicants to retain their passport after applying for
visa. Though there has been a reported drop in student visas last year,
owing both to rupee depreciation and to stricter admission norms, the coming
season is expected to reverse the trends gradually.
Content
courtesy: The Hindu, dated March 27,
2014.
Labels:
Bschools admissions,
IELTS,
UK,
United Kingdom,
Visa
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Indian School of Business - Young Leaders Program ( YLP )
ISB YLP: step on the accelerator to the corporate world.
The first batch of ISB YLP is ready to get
into the prestigious 1 yr MBA at ISB( Hyderabad and Mohali) in April ’14. The young leader’ s program is a unique
package in that ISB handholds you by guiding you while you are still in
college. You are initiated into leadership even before you do MBA. The YLP is the foundation for the PGP, a
foundation that gives you the much needed assurance and guaranteed career in
business.
What it takes?
ISB looks out for early signs of
leadership. Of course,
consistent, excellent academics and
non-academics are mandatory.
What happens at the mentoring stage?
In a nut shell it readies you for the 1 yr
MBA program in a structured manner; the 21 month work experience and
simultaneous mentoring by ISB, nearly substitute the experience you gain in
four to five years in the industry. Once the screening ( included in this story
itself) is completed and you’re admitted, you attend weekend contact programs
on campus, every six months. The contact sessions centres around career
planning, communication, profiling, readiness for the rigors of the 1 yr MBA. Interactive sessions, assignments are part
of the contact programs.
Program Structure
March - Pre-final year Apply to Stage 1 of
YLP
August - Final year Short-listed candidates
to
apply to Stage 2 with GMAT scores
September - Final year Final selection
process on
Campus October - Final year Admission offers
Summer - Year 1 of work Attend YLP Learning
Weekend 1, complete graduation and start
your job
Winter - Year 1 of work Attend YLP Learning
Weekend 2
Summer - Year 2 of work Attend YLP Learning
Weekend 3
Winter - Year 2 of work Attend YLP Learning
Weekend 4
Winter - Year 2 of work Apply for ISB
scholarship and
attend interview
April - Year 2 of work Join ISB PGP*
Deadlines
Application Stage 1 deadline March 15, 2014
Stage 1 shortlist announcement April 30,
2014
Application Stage 2 deadline August 07, 2014
Stage 2 shortlist announcement August 31,
2014
Stage 3 - Final selection process September
30, 2014
on campus
Admission offers October 15, 2014
Acceptance of offer October 31, 2014
Inputs courtesy:
http://www.isb.edu/young-leaders-programme
Friday, March 14, 2014
Dynamics of computer-based tests
When open ended questions ruled the world of educational testing, the test faced immense criticism for its subjectivity, after-all the evaluator’s biases were too obvious to be ignored. Though there is no replacement for open ended questions ( the reason why they are still the best bet for knowledge assessment at school and college), a new era of objective multiple-choice questions( MCQs), affordable for testing a large number of students, found their place at different levels . Though reasonably reliable, MCQs are not fool-proof either, with their posing a two-way challenge- the chances of guess and the failure to test certain thinking skills if they are relevant to be tested. Unlike open- ended questions, MCQs cannot test creativity, self-expression or a respondent’s thinking process. As an antidote to the ‘guess’ factor, many MCQ format tests come with negative marking.
The emerging computer- based tests( CBTs)
The emergence of computer as a medium of testing, especially in aptitude testing involving large numbers, has opened up many possibilities. With revolutionary software, we can present multiple format questions, adapt test to the test taker’s ability, reduce chances of guessing, evaluate essay responses, equate scores on different
tests.
The CAT CBT
The Common Admission Test conducted by the IIMs for admissions into IIMs and many other MBA colleges is now administered on computer ( this year the test will be administered from Oct 16th to Nov 11th). In the previous year, the test had two sections, with a time-limit of 70 minutes per section. The quantitative ability and data interpretation formed one section, and verbal ability and logical reasoning constituted the other. The test permits you to go back and forth with in a section, skip questions for later attempt, and work on any question within a section. The second section will appear only after the time limit for the first section is up. All questions are in the multiple-choice format. There are scroll bars to view data spread across more than one screen and you can highlight text. A review screen will show if you have left any question unanswered. Negative marks for wrong answers serve as penalty.
Statistical procedures, conforming to psychological testing standards, are used to equate scores of different test takers who take different combinations of questions, drawn from a large pool.
The GRE, Section adaptive
The Graduate Record Examination conducted globally by Educational Testing Services USA, for admission into MS, PhD and business courses, had introduced a new computer test format in 2011. The test has three sections - an essay section with two topic prompts, a quantitative ability section with two sub-sections and a verbal reasoning section with two sub sections. Not all questions in the math and verbal are in the conventional multiple choice format. For some questions, you are required to enter a numerical value, click on one or correct answers, or highlight a sentence in a passage etc. As in the CAT exam, you can move forward and backward with in a section(here sub-section), answer questions in any order, or skip a question. An online calculator is peculiar to to facilitate calculations.
A unique feature of the GRE is that the test is section adaptive. The first subsection of each of math and verbal comprises moderately difficult questions. Your performance in this section determines the difficulty level of the questions in the second sub-section presented to you. This means that a good performance in the first sub-section will result in a tougher second subsection, raising your chances of a higher score. The essays are graded two ways – language assessment using an e-rater and content evaluation manually by essay evaluators. The GRE test has evolved so much that scores on the paper- based test and those of the computer-based test are equated.
The GMAT, Question adaptive
The Graduate Management Admission Test, administered by GMAC USA, is one step ahead of the CAT and the GRE, in its format. In addition to the essay, quantitative and verbal sections you have a new integrated reasoning( IR) section. A vast majority of test takers find the verbal section of the test more complex and demanding than that of the other two exams discussed above. The passages are abstract, sentence correction questions tests the intricacies of English language and critical reasoning tests higher order thinking skills. The integrated reasoning tests your ability to analyse, integrate and evaluate data presented in multiple format. In the IR section, you can drag columns and rearrange data.
Unlike section-adaptive GRE, the GMAT is question adaptive. That is, depending on your performance in a given question, the weight age of the next question will be determined. Hence you cannot skip a question, neither can you go back to a question. Each section is separately adaptive. There is no score deduction for unanswered questions; instead a cluster of wrong answers will invite lower weightage questions.
With each admission test posing a new set of challenges, test aspirants must adapt to the changing dynamics of competitive exams. The scores of CAT and other Indian exams are valid only for that year, where as the GRE and GMAT scores care valid for 3-5 years. Since these exams test more or less similar skills, many MBA colleges in India take GMAT or GRE scores. Though there are overlaps in preparation, extra bit of learning will give you more options.
Contributed by Dr. Vijayakumari
GRE, GMAT trainer at semantics Chennai
Email: vijaya@semanticslearning.com
Labels:
Adaptive test,
CAT,
computer based test,
GMAT,
GRE,
IIM
Thursday, March 6, 2014
How to prepare for GMAT logical reasoning?
How
to prepare for GRE, GMAT logical reasoning?
Let’s face reality. Few college books prepare
you to think critically. But critical thinking skills are extensively tested in
both GRE and GMAT. Critical reasoning (referred to also as logical reasoning or
analytical reasoning) constitute an array of thinking skills that involve,
analysis, synthesis and evaluation of numerical, verbal or non-verbal data.
Numerical reasoning questions measures your ability to apply reasoning in a
math setting whereas non-verbal reasoning involves interpreting symbols and
pictures, the latter skills hardly tested in higher order aptitude tests. A
majority of reasoning questions tested in these exams are text-based
(verbal
reasoning).
Logic is the science of correct reasoning. It
is integral to mathematics and philosophy. There are many logic concepts that
originate from the above disciplines and applied in GRE and GMAT tests. The
common test areas, viz. critical
reasoning (short passages that
present arguments), argument essay and integrated reasoning draw immensely from
philosophy and logic. These questions
requires you to analyze issues, reason logically, and argue effectively. These
skills are essential to succeed in higher studies as well as in careers.
How to build reasoning skills
1. Using
test prep resources
A common practice among test
aspirants is to seek help from coaches, preparatory test guides and online
discussion forums in order to learn tips and strategies to crack reasoning
questions. No doubt some of these are useful sources to make you motivated and
test ready. However exercise caution; desist from using these indiscriminately;
do quality check.
2. Reading
varied texts
Those who are habituated to
reading will over time become critical thinkers, and thereby succeed in many
areas of aptitude tests. It is to be noted that the question stimulus in
reasoning tests are drawn from everyday knowledge rather than from academic
disciplines. Being well-read will make you familiar with the content of these
problems.
3. From principles of logic
A third and highly
productive way to build your logical reasoning is to master elementary logic
theory. What is logic theory?
Here’s a basic concept in logic.
Statement : Whenever Sara
goes to the supermarket, she buys cookies.
You saw Sara this morning
carrying a jar of cookies. Can you then infer that Sara has gone to the super
market?
No. this is wrong reasoning, because the
supermarket is not the only place where Sara buys cookies from.
Let’s consider the scenario:
Sara did not buy cookies, can we infer
that she did not go to the supermarket? Yes, we can.
In logic theory terms, the original
statement can be expressed as,
If
A, then B; If not B, then not A. This expression can
be applied to a class of problems. Many such formulae can be learnt and applied to logical
reasoning. Merely common sense will not work.
There are many books on
elementary logic suitable for beginners
that can give you solid foundation in
critical thinking. You may make use of such sources for your test preparation.
A good book on critical
reasoning
One book I would recommend
is Critical thinking: A Student’s
Introduction by Gregory Basham,
William Irwin et al. Online edition of
this book is also available.
This book provides all
basics consistent with the reasoning historically assessed in tests of
reasoning and aligned with the content areas covered in global admission examinations. Hence a good
reference source for aptitude trainers too. The
real-world examples and proven step- by- step approach to answering questions
that this book provides can significantly improve the way you look at
reasoning problems. The concepts that you need are;
structure and components of arguments,
inductive and deductive arguments, method of evaluating arguments and ways to spot common errors in arguments.
Let your preparation involve
understanding the logic behind problems and not merely seeking solutions.
Becoming a critical thinker is both an
adventure and hard work. Practice. Make mistakes. Learn from them.
Improve. In the coming test season, be
equipped with a workable set of thinking tools.
Contributed by
Dr. Vijayakumari
Instructor at semantics, Chennai
Email: vijaya@semanticslearning.com
Friday, February 21, 2014
Get serious about GMAT (Here are 6 pointers)
Get serious
about GMAT (Here are 6 pointers)
1. Avoid
booking a test date and then starting your preparation. A common practice. Let’s not
underestimate the exam. There is lots to learn. In all likelihood the prep time
that you earmarked would turn out to be much less than required.
2. Before you start working out math, grammar etc, make a list of all that is totally new to
you. Refer to official publication, search online or meet a good instructor
to assist you in this task.
3. Do a
skill check: Knowing the concept is good, but your ability to apply the
concept to answer a question is a different ball game altogether. At every
stage of concept, learning do multiple choice questions and check your test
skills.
4. Learn
from mistakes, not yours but others’.
What are other test aspirants saying? You can’t take everything to be true. But
a good observation can help you avoid
the common blunders.
5. Ensure that you master every single rule, concept and logic. You are not taking a
semester exam to choose ’important’ chapters.
6.Your practice
test scores should be real, not
inflated. You ought to consistently score at levels that match your target
score, say, in 5 full exams, including
essay and IR)
Monday, February 3, 2014
Busines schools that take GRE scores
Use your GRE scores in these B. schools:
A lot of universities use GRE scores for MBA admissions globally. Here is a list of institutions that take GRE scores.
1.US colleges/programs
University of Alabama Birmingham
Arizona State University
Thunderbird School of Graduate Management
Stanford University
University of California Berkeley
University of San Diego
University of San Francisco
University of Southern California
Troy University Western Region
Yale University
Illinois Institute of Technology
Ball State University
Purdue University Main Campus
Harvard Business School
Hult International Business School Boston
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Rutgers University Newark
Clarkson University
Syracuse University
Carnegie Mellon University
University of South Carolina
Vanderbilt University
Rice University
Texas A&M University Central Texas
University of Dallas
University of Houston Main Campus
University of Texas Arlington Main Campus
University of Texas Main Campus
George Mason University Fairfax
University of Wisconsin Madison
2.Canadian colleges
Simon Fraser University (Financial Risk Management)
Ivey Business School
3.Colleges in Europe
ESCP Paris
HEC Paris
INSEAD, France
Munich Business School,Germany
SDA Bocconi, Italy
European School of Economics,Germany
Erasmus University Rotterdam School of Business, Netherlands
U Amsterdam, Amsterdam Business School,Netherlands
Escuela de Alta Dirección y Administration (EADA),Spain
Instituto de Empresa, Spain
Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden
Business School Lausanne, Switzerland
Ecole Hôtelière de Lausanne, Switzerland
IMD. Switzerland
University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
Hult International Business School, London
University of Cambridge, UK
University of Kent, UK
University of Manchester, UK
4.Colleges in South Asia
Asian Institute of Management, Philippines
INSEAD, Singapore
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
National University of Singapore
Singapore Management University, Singapore
A lot of universities use GRE scores for MBA admissions globally. Here is a list of institutions that take GRE scores.
1.US colleges/programs
University of Alabama Birmingham
Arizona State University
Thunderbird School of Graduate Management
Stanford University
University of California Berkeley
University of San Diego
University of San Francisco
University of Southern California
Troy University Western Region
Yale University
Illinois Institute of Technology
Ball State University
Purdue University Main Campus
Harvard Business School
Hult International Business School Boston
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Rutgers University Newark
Clarkson University
Syracuse University
Carnegie Mellon University
University of South Carolina
Vanderbilt University
Rice University
Texas A&M University Central Texas
University of Dallas
University of Houston Main Campus
University of Texas Arlington Main Campus
University of Texas Main Campus
George Mason University Fairfax
University of Wisconsin Madison
2.Canadian colleges
Simon Fraser University (Financial Risk Management)
Ivey Business School
3.Colleges in Europe
ESCP Paris
HEC Paris
INSEAD, France
Munich Business School,Germany
SDA Bocconi, Italy
European School of Economics,Germany
Erasmus University Rotterdam School of Business, Netherlands
U Amsterdam, Amsterdam Business School,Netherlands
Escuela de Alta Dirección y Administration (EADA),Spain
Instituto de Empresa, Spain
Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden
Business School Lausanne, Switzerland
Ecole Hôtelière de Lausanne, Switzerland
IMD. Switzerland
University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
Hult International Business School, London
University of Cambridge, UK
University of Kent, UK
University of Manchester, UK
4.Colleges in South Asia
Asian Institute of Management, Philippines
INSEAD, Singapore
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
National University of Singapore
Singapore Management University, Singapore
Friday, January 24, 2014
Indian Business schools which take GMAT scores - Classified based on location
Indian B.schools which take GMAT scores
North
1. IIM Ahmedabad
2. IIM Lucknow, Indore, Raipur
3. Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, Delhi
4. IMT, Ghaziabad
5. IMI, New Delhi
6. School of Management, NIIT University, Neemrana
7. Birla Institute of Management Technology, Noida
8. Management Development Institute India, Noida
9. MICA, Ahmedabad
10. University of Delhi, Faculty of Management Studies
11. BITS Pilani
South
1. Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad
2. IIM Bangalore,Trichy
3. Great Lakes Institute of Management, Chennai
4. Indian Institute of Science (IISc) - Bangalore
5. TAPMI, Manipal, South karnataka
6. IFMR, Chennai
7. SDMIMD, Mysore
8. Amrita School of Business, Coimbatore
9. PSG College of Technology, PSG Institute of Management, Coimbatore
East
1. IIM Calcutta, Shillong,
2. XLRI, Jamshedpur
3. Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar
West
1. KJ Somaiya Institute of Management Studies & Research, Mumbai
2. FLAME School of Business India, Maharashtra
3. Goa Institute of Management, Goa
4. Prin. L.N. Welingkar Institute of Management Development and Research , Mumbai
North
1. IIM Ahmedabad
2. IIM Lucknow, Indore, Raipur
3. Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, Delhi
4. IMT, Ghaziabad
5. IMI, New Delhi
6. School of Management, NIIT University, Neemrana
7. Birla Institute of Management Technology, Noida
8. Management Development Institute India, Noida
9. MICA, Ahmedabad
10. University of Delhi, Faculty of Management Studies
11. BITS Pilani
South
1. Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad
2. IIM Bangalore,Trichy
3. Great Lakes Institute of Management, Chennai
4. Indian Institute of Science (IISc) - Bangalore
5. TAPMI, Manipal, South karnataka
6. IFMR, Chennai
7. SDMIMD, Mysore
8. Amrita School of Business, Coimbatore
9. PSG College of Technology, PSG Institute of Management, Coimbatore
East
1. IIM Calcutta, Shillong,
2. XLRI, Jamshedpur
3. Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar
West
1. KJ Somaiya Institute of Management Studies & Research, Mumbai
2. FLAME School of Business India, Maharashtra
3. Goa Institute of Management, Goa
4. Prin. L.N. Welingkar Institute of Management Development and Research , Mumbai
Monday, November 4, 2013
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
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
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Latest GMAT verbal tip 18-9-2013
Latest verbal tip added at http://www.semanticslearning.com/GMAT-verbal-tips.asp
Instruction comprehension: A closer look at the directions for SC questions.
You see these directions with every sentence correction test that you take. But have you taken a closer look at these?
Each of the sentence correction questions presents a sentence, part or all of which is underlined. Beneath each sentence you will find five ways of phrasing the underlined part. The first of these repeats the original; the other four are different. Follow the requirements of standard written English to choose your answer, paying attention to grammar, word choice and sentence construction. Select the answer that produces the most effective sentence; your answer should make the sentence clear, exact, and free of grammatical error. It should also minimize awkwardness, ambiguity, and redundancy.
Things to comprehend.
1. There may /may not be error(s) in the given sentence. That is, the original sentence can be correct.
2. it tests more than merely grammar – word use, arrangement of words equally important.
...............
Instruction comprehension: A closer look at the directions for SC questions.
You see these directions with every sentence correction test that you take. But have you taken a closer look at these?
Each of the sentence correction questions presents a sentence, part or all of which is underlined. Beneath each sentence you will find five ways of phrasing the underlined part. The first of these repeats the original; the other four are different. Follow the requirements of standard written English to choose your answer, paying attention to grammar, word choice and sentence construction. Select the answer that produces the most effective sentence; your answer should make the sentence clear, exact, and free of grammatical error. It should also minimize awkwardness, ambiguity, and redundancy.
Things to comprehend.
1. There may /may not be error(s) in the given sentence. That is, the original sentence can be correct.
2. it tests more than merely grammar – word use, arrangement of words equally important.
...............
Friday, September 13, 2013
Latest math tip
To solve a sum dealing with number of men and number of days taken to complete a work use the logic: 1 person takes 1 day to complete 1 unit of work.
If 20 men take 20 days to complete a work, How many days it will take 40 men take?
Assume 1 person takes 1 day to complete 1 unit of work. 20 men complete 20 units in 1 day. So in 20 days, 400 units is completed.
Hence 40 men will complete 40 units in 1 day and 40 men will complete 400 units in 10 days.
Answer is 10 days.
If 20 men take 20 days to complete a work, How many days it will take 40 men take?
Assume 1 person takes 1 day to complete 1 unit of work. 20 men complete 20 units in 1 day. So in 20 days, 400 units is completed.
Hence 40 men will complete 40 units in 1 day and 40 men will complete 400 units in 10 days.
Answer is 10 days.
For more math tips visit. http://www.semanticslearning.com/GMAT-math-tips.asp
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