Chili Hot GMAT Verbal Review Buy on Amazon

https://www.ebooknetworking.net/books_detail-1897393768.html

Chili Hot GMAT Verbal Review

Book Details

Author(s)Brandon Royal
ISBN / ASIN1897393768
ISBN-139781897393765
Sales Rank8,857,213
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description


Number of Pages 236
Type Paperback
CHILI HOT GMAT: VERBAL REVIEW will help readers develop the skills and mindset needed to score high on the verbal section of the GMAT exam. Each hand-selected problem comes with a Classification, Snapshot, and Chili Rating. Classification serves to identify each problem according to category or sub-category. Snapshot highlights why that particular problem was chosen, including the underlying problem-solving principle or strategic approach. Chili Rating helps candidates gauge the estimated difficulty level of a given problem. A single chili indicates that the estimated difficulty level of a given problem is "mild" (500 to 590 difficulty level), two chilies spell "hot" (600 to 690 difficulty level), and three chilies signal "very hot" (700 or above difficulty level). By studying problems of varying difficulty, candidates will learn to maintain discipline on easy but tricky questions and also to exercise flexibility when deciding on multiple approaches and time-saving shortcuts for use in tackling harder, more involved problems.

Note to readers: This book contains the excerpted verbal sections from the parent title Chili Hot GMAT: 200 All-Star Problems to Get You a High Score on Your GMAT Exam.CHILI HOT GMAT: VERBAL REVIEW will help readers develop the skills and mindset needed to score high on the verbal section of the GMAT exam. Each hand-selected problem comes with a Classification, Snapshot, and Chili Rating. Classification serves to identify each problem according to category or sub-category. Snapshot highlights why that particular problem was chosen, including the underlying problem-solving principle or strategic approach. Chili Rating helps candidates gauge the estimated difficulty level of a given problem. A single chili indicates that the estimated difficulty level of a given problem is "mild" (500 to 590 difficulty level), two chilies spell "hot" (600 to 690 difficulty level), and three chilies signal "very hot" (700 or above difficulty level). By studying problems of varying difficulty, candidates will learn to maintain discipline on easy but tricky questions and also to exercise flexibility when deciding on multiple approaches and time-saving shortcuts for use in tackling harder, more involved problems.

Note to readers: This book contains the excerpted verbal sections from the parent title Chili Hot GMAT: 200 All-Star Problems to Get You a High Score on Your GMAT Exam.

More Books in English language

More Books by Brandon Royal

Donate to EbookNetworking
The Vocabulary Diet...Prev
Success with BEC Hi...Next