Cracking the GMAT, 2003 Edition
bGeoff Martz/battended Dartmouth College and Columbia University, joining The Princeton Review in 1985 as a teacher and writer. Martz headed the development team that designed the Review’s GMAT course. He is the author or coauthor ofbCracking the ACT/b,bPaying for College/b,bCracking the GED/b, andbHow to Survive Without Your Parents’ Money/b.The Princeton Review realizes that acing the GMAT is very different from getting straight As in school. The Princeton Review doesn’t try to teach students everything there is to know about math and Englishonly the techniques they’ll need to score higher on the exam.iThere’s a big difference/i. InbCracking the GMAT/b, The Princeton Review will teach test takers how to think like the test makers and:brbr* Eliminate answer choices that look right but are planted to fool youbr* Raise your score by practicing with our GMAT Pre-Diagnostic Test, Scoring Guide and Explanationsbr* Use process of elimination to solve tough data sufficiency problemsbr* Master even the toughest sections: Reading Comprehension, Sentence Correction, Data Sufficiency, Critical Reasoning, and morebrbr** Study the techniques and strategies in this book, and then practice them on more than 155 practice questions inside. The Princeton Review will also show readers how to go online and take 4 full-length simulated GMAT exams with instant score analysis. Practice test questions are just like the ones test takers will see on the actual GMAT, and The Princeton Review fully explains every solution.brbriContents Include/i:brbrbI Orientationbr/bOrientationbrHow to Think About the GMATbrCracking the System: Basic PrinciplesbrCracking the system: Intermediate PrinciplesbrCracking the System: Advanced PrinciplesbrTaking the GMATbrbII How to Crack the Math GMATbr/bGMAT Math: Basic PrinciplesbrThe POE and GMAT MathbrArithmeticbrAlgebrabrGeometrybrData Suff?Ð