Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning is one of the critical
sections in the CAT exam. If you are taking CAT 2010, you should
know the basic features of the section, the question pattern and
the preparation strategy. This article of MBAUniverse.com will tell
you all about Logical Reasoning for CAT 2010 preparation. Question
patterns of Logical Reasoning In the Logical Reasoning section, you
will be given a paragraph which will contain certain information.
It will be followed by two to three questions. The questions
generally start with ‘If', ‘Why' or ‘Then'. In such cases, more
than the information, your own thinking ability has to be used.
Some common forms of questions are family tree, letter encoding
etc. These questions are a sophisticated version of riddles that
you used to solve in your childhood. Ways to prepare for Logical
Reasoning If you logically prepare for this section, scoring in CAT
2010 will not be that big an issue. 'To start with, go to the
previous years' CAT papers and try to understand the ratio. Solve
them regularly to get a good grip of it,' mentions Gejo
Sreenivasan, Principal Consultant, Career Launcher. Ample practice
should be there. At this stage, when it is almost three months to
CAT 2010, you should solve around 10 sets every day. 'Solve at
least eight to 10 questions on Logical Reasoning every day,' says
Sidharth Balakrishna, author, CAT expert and IIM Calcutta alumnus.
An interesting way to prepare for this is by regularly solving
crossword puzzles, Sudoku, riddles etc. 'For this, pick out the
leisure section of the daily newspaper. You can also solve caselets
from various books and puzzle sites in the internet,' refers Manish
Saraf, COO, PT Education. While solving Logical Reasoning questions
The first step to follow when you see the Logical Reasoning
question is that read the question carefully and note down all the
information you obtain from the question. To have a better
understanding, you can draw Venn diagrams on the basis of it or
tables or charts, as per your convenience. 'If the question is
talking about a linear or round table seating arrangement, always
draw the seats first and then place people on various positions as
per the restrictions. If the question is talking about a tournament
of some sport, draw the points table and then proceed. Putting the
data in a tabular form helps your think with an uncluttered mind,'
suggests Vinayak Kudva, Product Head, IMS Learning. According to
Kudva, in a set, the questions are very closely linked. So it is
very important for you to read and re-read until you understand
what you are required to answer from each questions. 'If you get
the logic behind the set, you will be able to solve it,' he says.
He mentions a three step process to solve the questions: Read
Understand Solve He gives an example of a Logical Reasoning
Question on Encoding: Problem: If BARK = 41324121 and BAD = 4116
then BAFFLED will be coded as what? Solution: Consider the English
Alphabet and look at the positions of various letters. B is 2, A is
1, R is 18 and K is 11. So BARK stands for 211811. Similarly BAD
stands for 214. 2 1 18 11 is becoming 4 1 324 121. 2 1 4 is
becoming 4 1 16. If you look at it carefully you would notice that
every number is getting squared. Hence BAFFLED which stands for 2 1
6 6 12 5 4 will be encoded as 4136361442516. 'Logical Reasoning
requires the maximum amount of effort in the DI / LR section of the
CAT examination. You should look beyond your CAT Coaching material
and try out puzzles,' Kudva mentions. To read the article on Data
Interpretation, click on the following link:
http://www.mbauniverse.com/article/id/3371/Tips-on-Data-Interpretation
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