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

Sunday, September 13, 2009

GMAT Verbal - Critical Reasoning

The GMAT Verbal Section consists of 41 questions taken over 75 minutes. There are three main question types:

4a. Reading Comprehension (12-14 of 41 questions)

4b . Sentence Correction (12-14 of 41 questions)

4c . Critical Reasoning (12-14 of 41 questions)

A. Critical Reasoning Introduction

Critical Reasoning section of GMAT tests your reasoning ability but it is of a much higher level than the ordinary Logical Reasoning. A type of reasoning that a management graduate is required to follow in an amazing variety of work situations.



The tests are similar to Reading Comprehension to the extent that a passage is to be read and questions answered with respect to the information in the passage. The difference is that these passages rarely exceed 100 words and contain information that is to be understood clearly. Reading comprehension passages are long and punctuated with peripheral facts. By contrast, Critical Reasoning passages are quite short, and every single word should be considered very carefully; there are subtle shades of meanings, which often require a reading between the lines.


The key to solving these types of questions is to recognize the premise and the conclusion. Essentially, two or more premises lead to a conclusion and assumptions are the unstated premise in this chain.



However, life at GMAT is not absolutely black and white. This rule is to be applied in a variety of ways, some of the questions require you to understand the question and apply the rule in a highly subtle and skilled manner.


The good news is that the questions are based on elementary rules of logic and good old common sense. ETS says that – ‘no knowledge of terminology and of the conventions of formal logic is presupposed.’


The instructions at the beginning of the test are:


DIRECTIONS: After reading the question, pick the best answer among the choice that follow.


B. Basic Terminology


Before we actually tackle Critical-reasoning questions it would be a good idea to familiarize ourselves with the basic terminology.

Example 1:
David was talking during class, so he didn’t understand the teacher’s instructions.

Here, the conclusion is that David did not understand the teacher’s instructions.

The Premise that led to the conclusion is that David was talking.


Thus,


A Premise is a statement that serves as the basis of an argument. There may be more than one premise in a Critical Reasoning passage. All these premises put together lead to the conclusion.


A Conclusion is the point that the author is trying to convince the readers about with the help of the premises in the passage.


Arguments contain a number of premises and possibly more than one conclusion. Hence, it becomes necessary to classify and connect things and events in order to analyze the argument.


An Assumption is also a premise but an unstated one. It is a line of thought based on which the author makes a conclusion. The author’s conclusion is always dependent on an assumption.


An Inference is something that is implied in the passage yet not directly stated. It is different from an assumption because unlike the assumption the inference does not directly affect the conclusion. In other words the conclusion does not depend upon the inference. There can be more than one inference in a critical reasoning passage.


C. Types of Critical Reasoning Questions


1. Conclusion based questions:
2. Assumption type of questions:
3. Strengthen/ Weaken the argument type of questions:
4. Inferential type of questions:
5. Similar reasoning type of questions:


Most critical reasoning passages are in the form of arguments in which the writer tries to convince the reader of something.


There are three main parts to an argument.


The conclusion: this what the author is trying to convince us of.
The premise: these are the pieces of evidence that the author gives to support the conclusion.


An assumption: is also an evidence (but it is unstated) without which the entire conclusion becomes invalid.


In evaluating an argument, the first step is to identify the components – the premise and the conclusion.


The parts of an argument can be identified by certain cue words.
A premise may be recognized by words such as ‘if’, ‘given that’, ‘since’, ‘because’, ‘for’, ‘suppose’, and ‘in view of’. They signal the presentation of evidence and reasons in support of a fact or a claim.


Conclusions, on the other hand, may be preceded by words like ‘thus’, ‘hence’, ‘so’, ‘indicates that’ and ‘therefore’. Without cue words, identifying and analyzing an argument becomes difficult. Look for a statement that cannot stand alone, i.e. a statement that needs to be supported by premises.


If you cannot find the conclusion look for the premise instead. These are the parts of the arguments that support the conclusion. Lets us see an example where the premises have been stated and a conclusion is to be provided.


An assumption is also a premise but it is an unstated one. It is a line of thought based on which the author makes a conclusion. The author’s conclusion is always dependent on an assumption.


The Critical reasoning question consists of a short passage followed by questions like –

“Which of the following best serves as an assumption that would make the argument above logically correct?” Read the question before you read the passage, so that you know that without the assumption plugged in, the conclusion will not hold.


If you decide to read the passage first, it may appear to be perfectly reasonable. It is only when you read the question that you realize that you have missed something or that there is a flaw in the reasoning. You will therefore have to go back to the passage. To avoid such a waste of time it is advisable that you read the question first.


Example
In order to save money in this fiscal year, the management voted to cut the overtime hours and hence freeze overtime wages. The shortsighted example is yet another example of the management being penny wise and pound-foolish. The production that will result from this action will cause many quality defects, resulting in market complaint. This will ultimately result in loss of market share and revenues.


Which of the assumptions does the author make in order for this argument to be logically correct?


(A) The workers are already overpaid and so the overtime pay freeze is warranted.
(B) The management cares less about the quality of the product than it does about saving money.
(C) If they do not work overtime and receive overtime pay, the workers will become lax in producing quality products.
(D) The management does not feel that less wages will necessarily result in quality taking a beating.
(E) The loss in revenue will not be as much as the money saved by cutting overtime wages.


The passage attempts to justify that the company will eventually have to lose much more than it is trying to save. Alerted to the fact that the logic is faulty (by having first read the question) you probably picked up the subtle shift from ‘freeze overtime pay’ to ‘cause many quality defects’. If you did, you might have asked yourself, ‘the fact that the salary of the workers are being cut does not necessarily mean that they will produce poor quality goods’. Thus there is a gap in the logic. To justify the conclusion presented, we need to assume that cutting wages will result in poor quality. This said in option (C).


Strengthen and Weaken the Argument


The questions that follow the passage are of the type:

• Which of the following, if true, would most support the views/conclusion/statement?

• Which of the following statements, if true, most weaken/strengthen the author’s claim that...

• Which of the following, if true, would negate/strengthen the author’s point of view?


If a question asks you to strengthen an argument, it is asking you to find a hole in the argument and to fix it with additional information. The argument may not be complete by itself and the answer looks more like a premise or an assumption.


The correct answer will strengthen/weaken the argument with new information. If you see an answer choice that is straight from the passage, its wrong. The answer choice will support the conclusion of the passage if it is a strengthen the argument type of question. Find the conclusion in the passage, then try out each answer choice to see whether it makes the conclusion stronger.


Like assumption questions and strengthen-the-argument questions, weaken-the-argument questions frequently point out the gaps inherent in inductive reasoning. You don’t need to fix the hole in the argument but expose it.


There are two main types of reasoning: Deductive and inductive. In deductive logic the conclusion must follow from the premises. In inductive logic the conclusion may be true, but it does not have to be. Three popular kinds of inductive logic are:


1. Statistical arguments where the statistics are representative.
2. Arguments by analogy where the two situations are analogous; and
3. Causal argument – where there might be an alternative cause.


These three kinds of inductive logic are very important in assumption questions, weaken-the- argument questions and strengthen-the-argument questions.


Example
Production houses like Columbia Pictures, Twentieth Century Fox etc. provide stock options to their employees. These companies are employing the highest number of people in the industry. There is little reason why most production houses cannot provide the same benefits to their employees.


Which of the following if true would weaken the arguments?


(A) Stock options is not offered to all the employees of a company.
(B) Columbia Pictures and Twentieth Century Fox have fewer members on their board.
(C) Most other production houses do not have the tax benefits that Columbia & Twentieth Century Fox have because they are the biggest employers in the industry.
(D) Other production houses have much more business.
(E) The trend to offer stock options in the industry has not caught on yet.


The answer is (C). If (C) is true; it explains why the other companies have not provided the benefits. (A) Does not weaken the arguments. It is secondary that the benefits are not extended to everybody. If (D) is true then it only strengthens the argument. (E) Is an observation but not as valid as (C).


Exercises


1. The Starship Enterprise is in danger of imploding from laser beams if the warp generators are not toroid resistant. Captain Spock says that no malleable circuits are toroid resistant and all warp generators are made of malleable circuits.


What is the conclusion that can be drawn from Captain Spock’s reasoning?

(A) Laser beams do not affect the malleable circuits.
(B) The Starship Enterprise is not in danger.
(C) The Starship Enterprise will implode from laser beams.
(D) Warp generators are toroid resistant.
(E) None of the above.


The correct answer is (C).
The trick is in the way the passage is worded. Warp generators are made of malleable circuits and malleable circuits are not toroid resistant. If they are not toroid resistant they are in danger of imploding from laser beams. This a typical critical reasoning question that can also be solved with the help of a Venn diagram. The passage requires clear understanding of the language, the logic is very simple.


2. You are visiting your cousin Tony. Tony begins by telling you what a great job he has. ‘I am a future millionaire,’ he says. ‘All the top executives in the company are millionaires and I am a future top executive.’ Tony is already planning on what kind of a mansion he wants to build.


What is the assumption that Tony is making?

(A) All millionaires have mansions.
(B) Top executives become millionaires.
(C) He works for a company where all the top executives become millionaires.
(D) Tony thinks he has a great job.
(E) None of the above.


The assumption is clearly (C). (B) Talks about top executives and not all the top executives and hence is not the answer.



3. South American girls have won the Miss World contest at least for the last 4 years in a row. Therefore the winner this year will also be a South American.


Which of the following definitely strengthens the conclusion?

(A) The Miss World contest was started 15 years ago and different countries have won it in the past.
(B) There are more participants from South America this year than before.
(C) More than 50% of the judges are from South America.
(D) A different country has won the contest every year in the last decade.
(E) It has been noticed that the winners of the contest rotate through different continents in a 5-year cycle. The winner five years ago was an Asian country.


The correct answer is (E).
(B) And (E) qualify as the options that strengthen the conclusion. However, (E) definitely strengthens the conclusion that the winner this year will also be a South American because the option says that a continent has a winner for 5 years in a row. (A) and (D) weaken the argument.

GMAT Verbal - Sentence Correction

The GMAT Verbal Section consists of 41 questions taken over 75 minutes. There are three main question types:

4a. Reading Comprehension (12-14 of 41 questions)

4b . Sentence Correction (12-14 of 41 questions)

4c . Critical Reasoning (12-14 of 41 questions)

Sentence Correction type of questions are essentially a test of grammar and hence of communication skills, which is a necessary strength of an MBA. The test-taker is required to know not only a wrong sentence construction from a correct one, but also the change needed to correct any error. Moreover, brevity in sentence construction is to be practiced. Error can range from Noun-verb mismatches, to wrong idiomatic constructions, from excessive wordiness to simple illogicality.

Points to remember/Definitions


Conjunction

A conjunction is a part of speech that connects words or groups of words. Conjunctions are of three types: coordinating, subordinating and correlative.


Preposition

A preposition is a word or group of words used to show a connection between a noun or pronoun and another word in the sentence.


Interjection

An interjection is a word or phrase that expresses emotion and has no grammatical relationship with the rest of the sentence. E.g., Alas! The war is lost.


Participle

A verb form that functions (1) as part of a verb phrase or (2) as an adjective. The three forms are present participle, past participle, and perfect participle.

The student sketching the model is Anuradha.
I have finished my essay.
Having finished my essay, I turned it in.


Gerund

A verbal noun ending in -ing, that is, a noun formed from a verb. A gerund has the same form as the present or perfect participle.

Your speaking is appreciated.
Your having spoken to us is greatly appreciated.

Infinitive

A verb form that is the first of the three principal parts of a verb. The infinitive has the function of a verb (as part of the predicate), but it is also commonly used as a verbal or in a verbal phrase. When used as a verbal, it functions like a noun, adjective, or adverb and is usually preceded by the sign of the infinitive, the word to. to run, to jump, to dream, to think, to explain


Simple Tenses

In this tense the action is mentioned simply in the past, present or future tense.


Perfect Tenses

The perfect tense indicates that an action has been or will be completed in the past, present or future. The perfect tense contains the part of the verb ‘to have’ i.e., have, had, has and the past participle of the verb. The past participle of the verb ends with words like -ed, -en. (There may be exceptions like gave etc.,)


Continuous Tenses

The continuous tense indicates the continuation of a tense in the past, present or future. In this tense you have the form of the verb 'to be' - is, are, am, was, were, shall be, had been, have been and the present participle of the verb i.e. verbs ending with 'ing'.


Perfect Continuous Tense

The perfect continuous tense indicates that the action continued and then was completed in the past, present or the future. This tense uses a form of the verb 'to have' with the past participle of the verb 'to be' and the present participle of the main verb.


On the GMAT, tense problems are often just a matter of parallel construction. The general rule is that if a sentence starts out in a particular tense it should continue in the same.


Example

When I come to Chrysler, I bring along my notebooks from Ford, where I track the careers of several hundred Ford executives. After I fire I prepare a detailed list of everything I want removed from my office. During this same period, we to have to close a number of plants. A lot of people throw out of work. It's a very emotional thing for people who work in the same plant for twenty or thirty years. In some cases their parents work there too.


Answers:

came
brought
had tracked
was fired
had prepared
wanted
to remove
had
were thrown
have been working
had worked


Example

Mention the function of the word light in each line.


You’ve no need to light a night-light

On a light night like tonight,
For a night-light’s light’s a slight light,
And tonight’s a night that’s light.
When a night’s light, like tonight’s light,
It is really not quite right
To light night-lights with their slight lights
On a light night like tonight


Answers:

1st - You’ve no need to light (v) a night-light (n)

2nd - On a light night like tonight (adj)

3rd - For a night-light’s (adj) light’s (n) a slight light (n)

4th - And tonight’s a night that’s light (adj)

5th - When a night’s light * (n/adj), like tonight’s light (n)

7th - To light (v) night-lights (n) with their slight lights (n)

8th - On a light (adj) night like tonight


* Night’s light in the 5th sentence can be an adjective or a noun. When a night is light - here light is an adjective. Nights light i.e. a light of the night is a noun.


Errors of Nouns and Pronouns

A pronoun is used in place of a noun and must reflect its number and gender when possible.


Example

This the dog. This dog bit me yesterday.
This the dog that bit me yesterday.
I liked the people whom I spoke to yesterday
The men who attacked the shop were arrested.


You will notice that in each sentence the underlined word is a pronoun because it replaces and relates back to a noun.


Errors of Subject-Verb Agreement

For this, you need to recognize the subject and its corresponding verb in the sentence.

I am a dog-trainer who always consult with my clients before meeting his dogs. (Wrong)


Here, the subject “trainer” and its verb must agree in number i.e.,: “consults”. Again, “dogs”’ belong to “clients”, therefore “his” should take the plural form “their” (their dogs). Finally a dog trainer consults “his” clients not “my” clients.

Therefore: I am a dog trainer who always consults with his clients before meeting their dogs.

But: I am one of those trainers who consult with their clients before meeting their dogs (correct)


Dangling Modifiers

A dangling modifier is a word or phrase that modifies a word not clearly stated in the sentence.


Misplaced Modifiers

Related to dangling modifiers, Misplaced Modifiers occur when the word modified is not clear or could be more than one word. These problems can usually be solved by rearranging the elements already present in the sentence.


Unnecessary Modifiers

In general, the more simply an idea is stated, the better it is. An adverb or adjective can often eliminate extraneous words.


Example

Correct the sentences, if necessary and mention the type of error. (Dangling modifier or misplaced modifier)


1. Jane nearly ate the whole cake
2. Taking his time, the test was easy.
3. The article is on the table, which I wrote.

Answers:
1. Jane ate nearly the whole cake. (Misplaced modifier)
2. He took his time, as the test was easy. (Dangling modifier)
3. The article, which I wrote, is on the table. (Misplaced modifier)


Words and Phrases, Clauses

Parallel structure means using the same pattern of words to show that two or more ideas have the same level of importance. This can happen at the word, phrase, or clause level. The usual way to join parallel structures is to use coordinating conjunctions such as "and" or "or".


Words and Phrases

With the -ing form of words:
Parallel: Timothy likes reading, swimming, and bicycling.
With infinitive phrases:
Parallel: Timothy likes to read, to swim, and to ride a bicycle.


Clauses

A parallel structure that begins with clauses must keep on with clauses. Changing to another pattern or changing the voice of the verb (from active to passive or vice versa) will break the parallelism


Example 1

Not Parallel: The captain told the players that they should get a lot of sleep, that they should not eat too much, and to do some warm-up exercises before the game.


Idiom

The English language is full of idioms (over 15,000). We use idioms all the time, often without realizing that we are doing so.

An idiom is a phrase or a sentence whose meaning is not clear from the meaning of its individual words and which must be learnt as a whole unit.


For example,

1. The hill dropped off near the river.
2. While doing his homework, he dropped off.
3. Would you drop this off at the post office?

Here, the idiom ‘drop off’ has been used in three different ways.
In sentence 1, it means decline gradually.
In sentence 2, it means fall asleep and
In sentence 3 it means to stop and give something to someone.


Examples

DIRECTIONS: In each of the following sentences a part or whole of the sentence is underlined. Beneath each sentence, five different ways of phrasing the underlined part are indicated; choose the best alternative from among the five.

1. My father was delighted to learn about me getting a degree at college.

(A) me getting a degree
(B) my getting a degree
(C) my degree getting
(D) my getting degree
(E) myself getting a degree


2. This one of the most entertaining movies that has appeared this year.

(A) movies that has
(B) movies thats have
(C) movies that have
(D) movies that
(E) movie that have


3. I have seen Mario’s paintings, who was a student of Narayanan.

(A) Mario’s paintings, who was a
(B) paintings of Mario, who was a
(C) paintings by Mario,
(D) paintings of Mario, a
(E) paintings, Mario who was a


4. When the poor woman asked for help, we two could only look at one another helplessly.

(A) only look at one another
(B) only look at another
(C) look only at one another
(D) only look at each other
(E) look at each other only


5. Anyone of these two books will be used as a script for our next drama.

(A) Anyone of these two
(B) Anyone two of these
(C) Either of these two
(D) Either two of these
(E) Two of any of these


Solutions


1. Correct usage is (B). A pronoun preceding a gerund (an 'ing' verb used as a noun) must be in the possessive case.

2. The correct usage is (C). We need to change has to 'have'. A verb must agree with its subject in person and number, since 'movies' is plural the verb has to be plural as well.

3. The correct usage is (C). The relative pronoun 'who' should be placed as close to its antecedent 'Mario' as possible. (B) sounds correct but it means paintings of Mario, literally.

4. The correct usage is (D). 'Each other' should be used in speaking of two persons or things. 'One another' in speaking of more than two. E.g., when we two parted, we wished luck to each other. But - all of us should love one another.


5. Correct usage is (C). 'Either' should be used in reference to two. When the reference is to more than two, we should use any one. E.g., He is smarter than any one of my students.

GMAT Verbal - Reading Comprehension

The GMAT Verbal Section consists of 41 questions taken over 75 minutes. There are three main question types:

4a. Reading Comprehension (12-14 of 41 questions)

4b . Sentence Correction (12-14 of 41 questions)

4c . Critical Reasoning (12-14 of 41 questions)

4a. Reading Comprehension

This will test you ability to read a passage and answer questions associated with it. It is a test of memory, eye for detail, good reading speak and ability to comprehend. The length is usually 750 to 800 words. The GMAT norm is around 4 questions per passage.


The types of questions


Main idea: Here you will be asked to recognize the main idea or theme of the passage, a possible title or the author’s primary objective.


Supporting Ideas: In this type of question, you are asked about the idea expressed in one part of the passage, rather than about the passage as a whole.


Drawing Inferences: Questions of this sort ask about ideas that are not explicitly stated in a passage. It is assumed by the reader from something said by the writer. An inference is the likely or probable conclusion rather than the direct, logical one. It usually involves an opinion or viewpoint that the writer wants the reader to follow or assume.


Specific Details: In this type of question, you may be asked about specific details or facts the author has stated explicitly in the passage.


Applying information from the passage to other situations: These questions ask you to make an analogy between a situation described in the passage and a similar situation or event listed in the question.


The logical structure of the passage: These types of questions test your understanding of the overall meaning, logic or organization of a passage. Frequently, you are asked how several ideas in a passage are interrelated.


Determining the meaning of words from the context: Here the words may not be commonly known to you but you are required to guess their meaning from the context of the passage. This may also require you to read between the lines. You may not know the exact meaning but you can arrive at the answer if you read the options.


The conclusion: This can be of the type:


1. What is the logical conclusion that can be drawn...
2. What is the purpose of paragraph 2...


Examples


Passage 1
The search for ways to lengthen human life goes on. Mankind, at least the Americans, will not give up until they have arrived at something concrete and marketable to ensure a lifespan of perhaps a hundred or even more years for the average man. Research on drugs to boost longevity has been in progress for decades, but US scientists are also exploring other, and easier, avenues. The latest formula has emerged from the University of Kentucky, where it has been discovered that happiness, not fried chicken, is the key to a long life. After studying Alzheimer’s disease and aging for 15 years, a neurologist has concluded that "a positive emotional state at an early age may help ward off disease and even prolong life". Negative emotions can reduce one's longevity while "it feels good to be happy and hopeful". An interesting theory though not shatteringly original. It is a common human experience that when one is happy, one feels good and vice versa. If you are feeling good, it is highly unlikely that you are feeling terribly unhappy. Scientists sometimes present us with dilemmas not unlike the ones faced by Alice during her travels. No less interesting is the fact that the research is based on a study of 678 nuns of the School Sisters of Notre Dame, which culminated in a book — Nun Study, Aging With Grace: What the Nun Study Teaches Us About Leading Longer, Healthier and More Meaningful Lives. Like its contents, the elaborate nature of the title should also help readers intending to go into the depths of the subject. However, those interested would do well to remember that happiness is neither easy to achieve nor easy to maintain, and often loses its color once achieved. The rebel Russian poet, Yeygeny Yevtushenko, had said, "The hell with it. Who never knew/ the price of happiness will not be happy”. Alexander Pope called it "our being's end" while another author made fun of it by describing happiness as "a warm puppy". It is also questionable whether nuns are ideal as case studies for this kind of research, for they have God on their side, unlike most of us, and have an easier access to happiness. The Kentucky scientist's prescription contains its own antidote because a conscious and determined search for happiness is likely to be counter-productive. It is wiser not to stick to any formula and to take life as it comes. That will bring both happiness and, God willing, also a long life.

1. What is the general theme or the topic of discussion in the passage?

2. What is the tone of the author? Which lines give away the answer?

3. What is the style of the passage?