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What is the GMAT Focus Edition? Everything You Need to Know
On March 8th, 2023, the Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC) announced the biggest changes to the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) since the inception of the test in 1954.
Designed cooperatively with leading business schools, the new version of the GMAT, called the “GMAT Focus Edition,” became available on November 7, 2023.
The current version of the GMAT will be available until January 31, 2024. After this date, the GMAT Focus Edition will be the only version of the GMAT available.
GMAT Focus Edition — Quick Facts
While the GMAT Focus Edition is still a developing story, here is what we know for sure from MBA.com:
- There will now be three 45-minute sections and the separate 30-minute Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA) and Integrated Reasoning (IR) sections will be removed
- The three sections will be Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights (read more on the Data Insights section below)
- Quantitative Reasoning will no longer test Geometry concepts or contain Data Sufficiency questions
- Verbal Reasoning will no longer contain Sentence Correction questions (SC)
- These changes reduce testing time from 3 hrs and 7 minutes to 2 hrs and 15 minutes
- Within each section, you will be able to flag questions and then go back and change up to three answers before the end of that section time
GMAT Focus Edition Introduces a New Section: Data Insights
According to MBA.com, “the Data Insights section measures candidates’ ability to analyze and interpret data and apply it to real-world business scenarios.”
The Data Insights section consists of 20 questions, some of which may require “math, data analysis, verbal reasoning, or all three.”
Question types within Data Insights include:
- Data Sufficiency Problems: Measures your ability to analyze a quantitative problem, recognize which data is relevant, and determine at what point there is enough data to solve the problem.
- Multi-Source Reasoning: Measures your ability to examine data from multiple sources including text passages, tables, graphics, or some combination of the three—and to analyze each source of data carefully to answer multiple questions. Some questions will require you to recognize discrepancies among different sources of data, while others will ask you to draw inferences or require you to determine whether data is relevant.
- Table Analysis: Measures your ability to sort and analyze a table of data, similar to a spreadsheet, to determine what information is relevant or meets certain conditions.
- Graphics Interpretation: Measures your ability to interpret the information presented in a graph or other graphical image (scatter plot, x/y graph, bar chart, pie chart, or statistical curve distribution) to discern relationships, and make inferences.
- Two-Part Analysis: Measures your ability to solve complex problems. They could be quantitative, verbal, or some combination of both. The format is intentionally versatile to cover a wide range of content. Your ability to evaluate trade-offs, solve simultaneous equations, and discern relationships between two entities is measured.
You should use GMAT Focus Official Prep materials to prepare for this section, practicing your critical reasoning and data literacy skills.
New GMAT Focus Edition Differences
The new GMAT exam differs from the classic GMAT in terms of test sections, length, and tested subject matter. The new GMAT Focus Edition combats test-taking fatigue, lasting 2 hours and 15 minutes, almost an hour shorter than the classic GMAT exam, two hours shorter than the GRE general test, and 45 minutes longer than the Executive Assessment (EA).
However, some similarities exist, as both exams test relevant business skills, reading comprehension, and data analysis skills. Further, like the current GMAT, the GMAT Focus Edition test remains a question-adaptive exam and can be taken online or at a test center.
The GMAT Focus Edition prioritizes higher-order critical reasoning, especially in the Verbal Reasoning section, and analyzing data, adapting to the rapidly changing business landscape.
Although the Quantitative Reasoning section no longer tests Geometry questions, test takers still need to understand coordinate plane geometry, as it is categorized as algebra on the new GMAT Focus Edition.
GMAT Focus Scoring System
Business schools rely on GMAT scores when deciding which prospective business school candidates most deserve an offer of admission.
The GMAT Focus exam boasts an improved official score report with detailed performance insights. Due to the removal of the Integrated Reasoning section, GMAT Focus Edition scores cannot be compared to the original GMAT test.
The total score factors in all three sections of the exam, discouraging test takers from heavily prioritizing studying for one section over the others.
The GMAT Focus better accommodates diversity in test takers, resetting the score distribution. The score distribution of the old GMAT exam had become uneven, due to the rise of GMAT scores over time, making the updated scoring system necessary for schools to better judge the meaning of an applicant’s total score on the GMAT exam.
Our Recommendation for Students
It may be a confusing next couple of months as the new test is rolled out and the current version continues to be administered.
We advise the following to our current students and those who are interested in signing up:
- Prepare for the current version through the end of this year with a few caveats noted below. We will continue for now with our curriculum for the current version of the test and roll out a new version with an updated live and on-demand course to be taught by our Director of Tutoring, Hailey Cusimano. The new version will remove SC and Geometry and add in a new Data Insights lesson.
- Even if you have spent time preparing for the current version of the GMAT, you can easily make the shift to the Focus Edition.
- We would recommend this move if you are really struggling with SC (usually a strength with our students) or if you are just not reaching your score goal on the current version.
- Almost all of your prep will be relevant but you can then pivot away from SC and Geo, and add in preparation for the Data Insights section.
- As we move into 2024, we will phase out our curriculum for the current test version and recommend that most people prepare for the GMAT Focus Edition with our updated curriculum.
At this point, we do not know exactly how MBA programs will use the two different exam versions for their application decisions.
Final Thoughts
As the GMAT Focus Edition will be the only admissions exam accepted at today’s graduate business programs after January 31, 2024, you need to focus on official practice exams designed specifically for the redesigned GMAT exam if your test date is February 1, 2024, or later. Official practice tests are available on mba.com.
Although still a rigorous and challenging exam, the new GMAT Focus Edition offers a less stressful testing experience, with fewer sections, less time spent at test centers, and a new question review and edit feature. The GMAT Focus Edition continues to prioritize critical thinking and verbal skills, in the format of a question adaptive test.
What we can say confidently is that this shift in the exam favors the style of preparation that we have always used in our curriculum: strategic and analytical preparation vs. content-based preparation. The goal of the GMAT has always been to assess higher-order thinking, and this new GMAT focus exam will shift even more from assessing “who knows things” to “who thinks the right way” to succeed in business school.
Prepare for the GMAT Focus Edition with our updated and comprehensive online GMAT prep course.