The Common Admission Test (CAT), conducted by the IIMs, has been
continuously evolving over the last two decades. An analysis of the
CAT question patterns will be beneficial to all MBA aspirants who
are preparing to give the CAT 2010 exam. With this objective
MBAUniverse.com -- in association with globally renowned publisher
of educational books, Pearson Education -- presents to you an
analysis of the changing pattern of CAT exam in the last two
decades, i.e. 1990-2009. This exclusive article is authored by
Sujit Kumar, author of CAT preparation [1] books for Verbal Ability
section, ‘English Usage for the CAT' and ‘Reading Comprehension for
the CAT' published by Pearson Education. He is a Faculty at CPL
(Pvt. Ltd.), Mumbai. He has been mentoring thousands of students in
the competitive exams like CAT, CET, GRE, GMAT etc. for the Verbal
Ability section. He is a Masters in English literature from
University of Mumbai and has a Diploma in Management. Apart from
corporate experience of over a decade, he has taught in the
mainstream as well as parallel education in India and abroad. The
exclusive article begins herewith: The Common Admission Test (CAT)
seems to be the most popular, yet the most feared competitive
examination in India. It is also the most student-friendly test,
though most people are so engrossed with its details that they miss
this aspect of the CAT exam. The glory that the Indian Institutes
of Management (IIMs) enjoy because of their campus placements
fetching fabulous salaries in a country that was until recently
considered poor has added to the hype around this exam and given it
an aura of extreme intelligence. The CAT exam, however, has always
been a regular aptitude test, testing the broad areas of English,
Mathematics, Data Interpretation, and Logical Reasoning. The CAT
exam seems to undergo a complete metamorphosis in every ten years
or so. CAT 1990 had 174 questions in four sections, with 100
questions in the Verbal Ability section. Reading comprehension was
a standalone section with 50 questions. There were 50 questions in
Quantitative Ability, and 24 in Data Interpretation and Logical
Reasoning. Sectional timing was a norm in the earlier CATs, but in
the decade that followed, sectional timing was done away with.
Through the 1990s the CAT exam remained more or less the same with
174 to 190 questions in four sections. The year 1999 saw a major
change in the CAT exam. It became three sections. The two sections
of English Usage, Vocabulary etc. and of Reading Comprehension were
combined into one with 55 questions in it. The test had 165
questions in three sections of 55 questions each. In the decade
from 1999 to 2008, the CAT exam became more and more compact.
Though the number of sections remained three, the number questions
reduced from 165 to 150, to 123, to 90 and then finally to 75. CAT
2009 was a watershed year in the history of the CAT exam. It became
a computer based test. The CAT exam took almost a decade to catch
up with the technological advancement in India. It was a welcome
change, though a little late. However, the CBT-CAT in 2009 blew up
in everyone's face and was marked by technical glitches,
controversies, lame excuses, cover-ups, and a remarkable
insensitiveness to the candidates' concerns. It had three sections
with 20 questions in each section. Did the testing actually change
over these years? It did – especially in Quantitative Ability and
Data Interpretation sections. The Quantitative Ability section of
the CAT exam [2] underwent considerable changes. In the 1990s and
later, the emphasis was largely on arithmetic topics like Number
Properties, Percentages, and Ratio Proportion etc. The questions
were formula driven and the students needed short-cuts and
non-conventional methods to maximize attempts. With the number of
questions reducing to 30 and then to 20 (2009) in this section the
focus shifted entirely towards analytical and reasoning skills;
multiple topics were factored into a single question. Formulae
became redundant. Logic became important. The emphasis shifted from
speed to accuracy and the selection of questions became a decisive
factor. Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning section also
changed significantly. With the reduction in the number of
questions, the caselets and graphs have almost disappeared.
The stress is on interpretation and reasoning skills rather than
calculation and counting ability. Sets that were earlier loaded
with numerical and statistical data now come with myriad conditions
and interdependencies. The given information has to be deciphered
and interpreted with precision for the student to be able to answer
the questions. The paradigm shift is not so pronounced in the
Verbal Ability Section. With as few as 20 questions equal
importance is still given to Reading Comprehension; and Non RC
(Grammar, Vocabulary and Reasoning.) The long 1500 word-long
passages gave way to 400 to 500 word-long passages with three
questions each. The difficulty level has eased in 2009 CAT. More
often than not, the difficulty level of the CAT exam is hyped up
too. Vocabulary and Reasoning questions too were, especially in
2009, the familiar and anticipated types. The CAT exam introduces
changes in the format or new question types almost unnoticeably
making the transition smooth and unobtrusive for the
students. The CAT is the most student-friendly exam for MBA
in India. Stay tuned to MBAUniverse.com for more special prep guide
from Pearson Education & MBAUniverse.com! MBAUniverse.com [3]
is one of India's most comprehensive MBA portals.MBAUniverse.com
[4] was set up in 2006 to address the information asymmetry in the
management education and practice domain. [1]
http://www.mbauniverse.com/ [2]
http://www.mbauniverse.com/article/id/3666/ [3]
http://www.mbauniverse.com/ [4]
http://www.mbauniverse.com/article/id/3666/
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