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A satisfactory performance – AIMCAT 100919

Haaaa, this was my reaction when i calculated my AIMCAT 100919 score. After the worst, pathetic performance in AIMCAT 100920, a good (Compared to my earlier scores only) socers was needed to boost me up in the preparations. Here is my shot at AIMCAT 100919

I have managed to score 29 Marks in the first section i.e. DI-LR. The section was tough as per the guidelines of TIME. But i never flet so. Because i knew tto clear the cutoff all i need are two sets with at least 95% accuracy. Thats where i hit the bull’s eye and got whoppping 100% accuracy in those two sets i choose to solve.

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AIMCAT 100919 Analysis

AIMCAT100919 Analysis

“Strike Two!” is what most of the students who gave a shot at AIMCAT0919 would nervously be telling themselves. Since, after having taken a rather amateurish, warm up swing at AIMCAT0920 a few weeks ago, without managing any spectacular performance as such, this AIMCAT would only have made one feel seriously under-prepared. Fortunately, however, the rules in CAT prep are not as strict as in baseball and one is not asked to leave the pitch after just three strikes. But on another note, being in the game and not giving up is definitely the more difficult part in CAT prep. So brace yourself and keep up your spirits, for it’s a long journey still.

AIMCAT0919 was a 30-questions-per-section paper, with four answer choices per question. The paper was actually a hybrid of CAT2005 and the latest CAT paper, i.e., in terms of the number of questions and number of choices this paper was similar to CAT2005 but it had no sub sections.

With one choice per question less, when compared to the previous AIMCAT, the Verbal section should have been a lot simpler. Quantitative more or less just as difficult as in AIMCAT0920, but Logic and Data Interpretation was of a much higher level of difficulty. Irrespective of how good or how worse you feel your performance may have been, remember that the final benchmark is your rank (or percentile) and whether you have managed to cross the cut-offs or not. So hold your horses till the dust settles and the results are out. Meanwhile spend some quality time analysing the paper, question by question, and figure out how you could have done better.

Let us now take a brief look at each section of the AIMCAT:

Section I – Logic & Data Interpretation:

Different data representations, convoluted descriptions of the data and the very tricky phrasing of the questions would have left most students teary eyed at their prospects in this section. Most of the sets appeared very difficult and incomprehensible and even those proficient in DI might have been wondering if they would achieve the cut-off score in this section. The set on the ‘gem-trader’ was very difficult to understand and interpret and hence should not have been attempted. The set on ‘Students and their Grades’ involved a lot of calculations, had many possibilities and students attempting them would have made quite a few errors. The set on ‘Prime numbers’ was the easiest of the lot and would have afforded decent scoring options for those whose forte is ‘trial and error’. The set on ‘XYZ Limited’ was easy for those comfortable with percentages. The set of questions on the pie charts were quite tricky and should have been left out. The DS questions were quite doable and students would have looked at them to salvage the section.

An average student in Logic & Data Interpretation could have managed a score of around 14+ marks and any score from 18 to 28 marks can be considered to be good. Any score from 29 to 42 would be very good and 42+, excellent.

The cut-off score in this section is expected to be around 18 marks.

Section II – Verbal:
This was, broadly speaking, a paper of moderate difficulty. Students may have found the RC passages on philosophy and ethics readable this time, having been exposed to these areas in the last AIMCAT, and (hopefully) with some similar reading thereafter. The passage on geopolitics would have been of interest to most, and therefore relatively easy to deal with. As in the previous AIMCAT, the RC questions were in the ‘moderate’ and ‘difficult’ categories and were of a variety of types, including interpretation and inference questions. As before, the para-jumbles required careful reading and recognition of idea flow, and were difficult. Some of the grammar and usage questions were also difficult, with errors that could easily escape attention. The vocab-based questions, usually the most ‘popular’ of VA questions (if such a term exists), appeared in the form of FIBs and were of moderate difficulty, except for one. The best summary questions tested the students on recognition of key ideas and idea flow and, for a student comfortable with reading, were do-able.

An average student in Verbal could have managed a score of around 18+ marks and any score from 28 to 40 marks can be considered to be good. Any score from 41 to 48 would be very good and 48+, excellent.

The cut-off score in this section is expected to be around 28 marks.

Section III – Quantitative:
The Quant section of AIMCAT0919 was considerably simpler compared to the Quant section of the previous AIMCAT. The section comprised of a good mix of questions from all topics with no particular topic/s being given significant weightage as such. This was very unlike the usual situation where topics like Numbers, Geometry or Permutations and Combinations often appeared carrying significant weightage. In fact, a common sense based reasoning approach is usually what is expected from a CAT examinee, wherein the basics of any topic are useful only to the extent of formulating the question and the solution mostly depends on one’s ability to analyse the situation using common sense, improvise on the basics and apply them – even under seemingly unfamiliar circumstances. Most of the questions were of a medium level of difficulty and several could be classified as difficult. There were, however, very few questions that were either very easy or very difficult. Some of the questions that should definitely have been attempted were Q. Nos. 61, 65, 66, 71, 76, 79, 84, 85, 87 and 88. Most of the other questions that were of a medium level of difficulty could also have been attempted.

An average student in Quantitative could have managed a score of around 18+ marks and any score from 24 to 35 marks can be considered to be good. Any score from 36 to 50 would be very good and 50+, excellent.

The cut-off score in this section is expected to be around 24 marks.

The overall cut-off for at least 1 IIM call would be in the range of 84-88 marks and any score in excess of 100 should fetch 3 or more IIM calls.

In the next post i will write about every of thid AIMCAT and some fundas.

Regards
Ameya

Logarithms

First of all sorry for posting my new post after so many days.
Today we will discuss some concepts on Logs or more properly known as Logarithims. Although many books (I do not want to write their names) says that logs are not of more importance when an exam like CAT is concerned. If you look towards the concepts involved in the topic and efforts reqired to put are less compared to other topics like Time, work and speed or say most time consuming Number systems. As i observe, when you flip through previos papers, you can surely say there will on an average 1-2 questions on Logs. But why should one spend one’s time just for 2 question?? Are you asking this to yourself? I think every question is a diffrentiater of you from the entire mass.

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Grammar Funda

While i am posting the grammar questions i feel it necessary to post some grammar concepts also. When i was preparing for CAT 2006, i never tried to study the grammar part seriously but later on when i went on to study the EU part, i came to know that amongst all the people clearing English cut off, winner is the one who solves EU part correctly. As you all know if you are good at EU you will end up solving at least 5-6 question 15 min !! so what is ROI on the investment you do on study of grammar? 15 questions + we assume to solve 5 question correctly = 20 mark i.e. more than half way through to clearing VA cutoff !!

Any ways let me start with discussing some of the grammar funda that i know.
I assume peopel are aware of basics such as Waht is verb? What is noun? so let me take you all to discuss what type sof verbs we mainly have.
There are many types of verbs but i will broadly categorise them into only two types and are :
1) Action verb
2) Linking verb

Let us first see what do you mean by linking verb, A verb that acts as a linking between a subject and direct object would be termed as linking verb. Linking verbs are a lot simpler to understand because there are few verb that always identified a linking verb. The list goes as follows..

is Was been
Am were being
Are be

These are the verbs, whenever occurs, mostly they are linking verbs.

Action verbs are the verbs which indicates action (Verb does the same, then how it is different?)

There is a quick trick to identify action verbs from rest of the verbs. that i will discuss in the next coming post. Firstly let me discuss how should we identify between Verbs & verb phrase??

Let us discuss this with an example

The Cake tasted delicious
Any one would think the TESTED is an actiion verb?? let us check
A simple trick out here is, insert a form of linking verb after the verb you have identified, if after inserting this, sentence still makes sense then verb is linking verb !!!

Let is insert a from of linking verb WAS
Now the sentence becomes : The Cake WAS delicious, Makes sense?? YES
So TASTED is not an action verb but is a linking verb.

Here i have explained a very simple trick to solve questions based on verb and i think this post will surely make things clear.

Hope it helps,
Regards,
Ameya

QAD-3

First of all here are the solutions to EQAD-2

A1 Can you hear what he is saying?
answer: (a) saying
A2 She hasn’t come home yet.
answer: (c) yet
A3 I watched TV yesterday evening.
answer: (d) watched
A4 We live near the city centre.
answer: (a) near
A5 She looks like a famous film star.
answer: (b) like

So here are next few question for you all
EQAD-3

Q1 Some people only read the ……. lines in a newspaper.
(a) top (b) big (c) main (d) head
Q2 You should always check the sell ……. date of things you buy in the supermarket.
(a) in (b) through (c) by (d) off
Q3 When the building was completed, all the workers were paid ……..
(a) off (b) through (c) out (d) over

Regards,
Ameya

EQAD-2

Hello all,
First of all i am sorry for noy posting the solution earlier. Well, before we start with the EQAD-2 here is the solution to earlier problem

EQAD Solution: option D
The error in this sentence occurs at (D), where there is an improper idiom. Both parts of the “both…and” structure must be followed by grammatically similar elements. Because “his” follows “both,” “his” must also follow “and” (“both his jazz and his classical”).

Noe here is the EQAD-2 for toady

Q1 Can you hear what he is …….?
(a) saying (b) speaking (c) telling (d) talking

Q2 She hasn’t come home ……..
(a) still (b) already (c) yet (d) till

Q3 I ……. TV yesterday evening.
(a) saw (b) looked (c) viewed (d) watched

Q4 We live ……. the city centre.
(a) near (b) next (c) by (d) nearby

Q5 She looks ……. a famous film star.
(a) as (b) like (c) similar (d) same

Hope it helps, i will post the answers tomorrow.
All the best and happy learning
BTW we have AIMCAT 2 coming up on 8th..
Regards,
Ameya

English question for the day.(EQAD)

Friends, here i am starting to post one question on english every day with explainnation. Question might be on word usage, grammer, parajumbles etc. I hope this will help many of ouie fellow CAT aspirants

Here is the question for the day
The following sentence contains either a single error or no error at all. If the sentence contains an error, select the one underlined part that must be changed to make the sentence correct. If the sentence contains no error, select choice E

Answer this question in the poll.

Regards,

Ameya

English Question a day !!

Exactly like what Pagalguy is runnign their QQAD (Quant question a day). Here is something i found out for english question, you can call it EQAD !! there are a few simple steps you have to follow.

Follow following URL :

https://ecl.collegeboard.com/account/AccountProfile2.jsp?applicationId=206&destinationpage=http%3A%2F%2Fapps.collegeboard.com%3A80%2Fqotd%2Fquestion.do%3Fsrc%3DO%26questionId%3D606

Here fill in all the required information, & email id, and just register. This will deliver one English question into your mail box everyday. Hope it helps many studens

Regards,
Ameya

First AIMCAT !!

Well, eveything is set to fly off with the first AIMCAT of the 2008 season. Juat thought to post before the test. Guys i think this is the time when many firstimers and also repeaters like me are apprering. But out of few thing i learned form previous CATs is, accuracy would be the key, Give soem time in selecting the questions, it is not a waste of time rather it is an investment.
For firstimers — If you have not finished the syllabus, (even i have not :) ) just go for the question that u r comfortable with, look out for sitters, mark them and solve them first because another thing i have learnt is, in first few minutes of CAT, it happens that you might not fine any sitter, any easy question, this creates problem and weakens your attitude. So start with your strong section, solve a few question, get a feel that YES i can solve it, grab the positive attitude and throttle with full power. ALL THE BEST again and hope few posts their score out here.
Also a discussion is going out there on Pagalguy about the mocks, here is the link
http://www.pagalguy.com/forum/cat-and-related-discussion/31613-which-test-series-to-choose-4.html#post1125529

Regards,
Ameya

Quick DI inputs..

While searchin some good contents for DI to start with i came across some really good contents on DI. Althought these are very easy question, but this would act as a starting point for all of those who are still struggling to start with DI from the scratch…
Here we go…
Unraveling the Purpose of Data Interpretation
Data Interpretation section virtually puts a student in the shoes of a Business Manager, who is inundated with useful (and not so infrequently with useless) data and has to make some quick interpretation of the data to reach important decisions. Once presented with graphs or tables, the mental processor of a manager starts whirring at the top gear and selects, prunes, manipulates, and compares the data and reaches certain conclusions. Successful operations of these processes require that a manager possesses qualities like:
o An eye for detail,
o An ability to focus on key issues quickly,
o An ability to work on numbers in different ways,
o An ability to see a trend,
o An ability to identify exceptional situations,
o An ability to work with logical relationships and An ability to reach a conclusion using deductive logic.
Well, here i am putting some D Iquestion for you to solve them from one of the DI doc i have with me. These examples are fro mCAT 2001 and are really simple..Give yourself a quick shot and test where you stand…

Question 1 to 3
There are six companies, 1 through 6. All of these companies use six operations, A through F. The following graph shows the distribution of efforts put in by each company in these operations

Q1. Suppose effort allocation is interchanged between operations B and C, then C and D, and then D and E and if companies are then ranked in ascending order of effort in E, what will be the rank of company 3?
1. 2 2. 3 3. 4 4. 5

Q2. A new technology is introduced in company 4 such that the total effort for operations B through F gets evenly distributed among these. What is the change in the percentage of effort in operation E?
1. Reduction of 12.3 2. Increase of 12.3
3. Reduction of 5.6 4. Increase of 5.6

Q3. Suppose the companies find that they can remove operations B, C and D and re-distribute the effort released equally among the remaining operations. Then, which operation will show the maximum effort across all companies and all operations?
1. Operation E in company 1 2. Operation E in company 4
3. Operation F in company 5 4. Operation E in company 5

Question 4 and 5

Answer the questions based on the pie charts given below

Chart-1

Chart-2

Chart-1 shows the distribution by value of top 6 suppliers of MFA Textiles in 1995. Chart-2 shows the distribution by quantity of top 6 suppliers of MFA textiles in 1995. The total value is 5760 million Euros (the European currency). The total quantity is 1.055 million tonnes.

Q4. The country, which has the highest average price, is
1. USA2. Switzerland 3. Turkey 4. India

Q5. The average price in Euro/ kg for Turkey is roughly
1. 6.20 2. 5.60 3. 4.20 4. 4.80

Question 6 to 7 (Source: CAT 2004)
The profitability of a company is defined as the ratio of its operating profit to its operating income, typically expressed in percentage. The following two charts show the operating income as well as the profitability of six companies in the financial years (F.Y.s) 2001-02 and 2002-03.

Bar Graph-1

Bar Graph-2

Q6. Which company recorded the highest operating profit in F.Y. 2002-03?
1. A 2. C 3. E 4. F

Q7. The average operating profit in F.Y. 2002-03, of companies with profitability exceeding 10% in F.Y. 2002-03, is approximately:
1. 17.5 crore 2. 25 crore 3. 27.5 crore 4. 32.5 crore

I will levae this question unanswered for a day and tomorrow i will post the detailed answers and aslo LR inputs. I will also try to post some more difficult question i have come across through my this journey to CAT 2008.

I am also planning to update this blog with some more inputs on QA topics like Logarithms, Progression.

Also on 18th we have a national MOCK CAT..All the best to all fellow aspirants..

Regards,

Ameya