Lesson 1.1: What’s Tested on GMAT Quant (Focus Edition)

๐Ÿ“˜ Lesson 1.1: What’s Tested on GMAT Quant (Focus Edition)

๐ŸŽฏ Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you will:

  • Master the structure and timing of the GMAT Focus Quantitative section
  • Identify all tested topics and understand their relative importance
  • Recognize what’s been removed from the traditional GMAT
  • Develop a strategic mindset for approaching different question types

๐Ÿง  The GMAT Focus Revolution

The GMAT Focus Edition represents the most significant update to the GMAT in decades. The Quantitative Reasoning section has been completely redesigned to focus on practical business math skills rather than abstract mathematical concepts.

Key Changes from Traditional GMAT:

  • Streamlined content: Removed less relevant topics like geometry
  • Unified question format: Only Problem Solving questions
  • Enhanced calculator access: On-screen calculator available throughout
  • Shorter duration: 45 minutes vs. 62 minutes in the traditional format

๐Ÿ“Š Section Overview at a Glance

Feature Details Strategic Notes
๐Ÿงช Questions 21 total ~2.1 minutes per question
โฑ๏ธ Time Limit 45 minutes Strict pacing required
๐Ÿง  Format All Problem Solving 5-option multiple choice
๐Ÿงฎ Calculator โœ… On-screen available Don’t over-rely on it
๐Ÿ”„ Adaptive โœ… Section-adaptive Performance affects difficulty
๐Ÿ“ˆ Scoring 60-90 scale Integrated with other sections

๐Ÿ“Œ Complete Topic Breakdown

๐Ÿ”ข 1. Arithmetic (40% of questions)

The foundation of GMAT Quant – these concepts appear in nearly every problem.

Core Topics:

  • Number Properties: Even/odd, prime factorization, divisibility rules
  • Fractions & Decimals: Operations, conversions, comparing values
  • Percentages: Percent change, compound interest basics
  • Ratios & Proportions: Direct/inverse relationships, scaling
  • Exponents & Roots: Laws of exponents, simplifying radicals

Why It Matters: Strong arithmetic skills allow you to solve problems quickly and recognize patterns that lead to elegant shortcuts.

๐Ÿ”ค 2. Algebra (35% of questions)

Applied algebra focusing on real-world problem solving.

Core Topics:

  • Linear Equations: Solving for variables, systems of equations
  • Quadratic Equations: Factoring, quadratic formula applications
  • Inequalities: Linear inequalities, absolute value inequalities
  • Functions: Basic function notation, domain/range concepts
  • Word Problems: Translating English to mathematical expressions

Strategic Focus: The GMAT tests your ability to set up equations from word problems, not just manipulate algebraic expressions.

๐Ÿงฉ 3. Word Problems & Applied Logic (25% of questions)

The most challenging category, requiring mathematical reasoning and logical thinking.

Core Topics:

  • Rate Problems: Speed-distance-time, work rates, combined rates
  • Mixture Problems: Weighted averages, alloy problems, solution mixing
  • Set Theory: Venn diagrams, overlapping groups, inclusion-exclusion
  • Statistics: Mean, median, mode, range, standard deviation basics
  • Sequences & Series: Arithmetic/geometric progressions, pattern recognition
  • Combinatorics: Basic counting, permutations, combinations
  • Probability: Independent events, conditional probability

Success Tip: These problems often combine multiple mathematical concepts. Practice identifying the underlying mathematical relationships.


๐Ÿšซ What’s No Longer Tested

Understanding what’s been removed helps you focus your study time effectively:

Removed Topic Why Removed Study Impact
Coordinate Geometry Less relevant to business scenarios Focus on algebraic relationships instead
Complex Geometry Triangles, circles, polygons eliminated More time for arithmetic mastery
Data Sufficiency Moved to Data Insights section Pure problem-solving focus
3D Figures Volume, surface area not tested Concentrate on 2D logical reasoning
Trigonometry Never heavily tested, now eliminated Redirect to probability/statistics

๐ŸŽฏ Strategic Question Analysis

Let’s examine a typical GMAT Focus question structure:

Sample Problem Walkthrough

Question: If a positive integer n is divisible by both 15 and 18, what is the smallest possible value of n?

  • A) 30
  • B) 45
  • C) 90
  • D) 180
  • E) 270

Solution Strategy:

  1. Recognize the concept: This tests least common multiple (LCM)
  2. Prime factorization approach:
    • 15 = 3 ร— 5
    • 18 = 2 ร— 3ยฒ
  3. Find LCM: 2 ร— 3ยฒ ร— 5 = 90
  4. Answer: C) 90

Key Insight: The GMAT rewards recognizing patterns and using efficient methods over brute force calculation.


โš ๏ธ Common Traps & How to Avoid Them

1. Calculator Dependence

  • Trap: Over-using the calculator slows you down
  • Solution: Use mental math for simple calculations, calculator for complex computations

2. First Answer Syndrome

  • Trap: Choosing the first “reasonable” answer without checking
  • Solution: Always verify your answer makes logical sense

3. Formula Memorization

  • Trap: Trying to memorize every possible formula
  • Solution: Focus on understanding concepts and deriving relationships

4. Time Mismanagement

  • Trap: Spending too much time on difficult early questions
  • Solution: Use strategic guessing and move on after 3 minutes max

๐Ÿ“ˆ Score Impact Analysis

Understanding how questions contribute to your score:

  • Easy Questions (60-65 range): Foundation arithmetic and basic algebra
  • Medium Questions (66-75 range): Multi-step word problems, pattern recognition
  • Hard Questions (76-90 range): Complex logic problems, advanced applications

Strategic Implication: Accuracy on easy and medium questions is more important than attempting every hard question.


๐ŸŽฏ Next Steps & Preparation Strategy

Immediate Actions:

  1. Diagnostic Practice: Take a timed 21-question practice set
  2. Identify Weak Areas: Focus study time on lowest-scoring topics
  3. Build Calculator Discipline: Practice when to use vs. avoid the calculator
  4. Develop Timing Awareness: Practice the 2-minute-per-question rhythm

Study Timeline Recommendations:

  • Weeks 1-2: Master arithmetic fundamentals
  • Weeks 3-4: Build algebraic problem-solving skills
  • Weeks 5-6: Tackle complex word problems and logic
  • Weeks 7-8: Full-length practice tests and timing refinement

๐Ÿ“‹ Quick Reference Summary

The GMAT Focus Quant Formula:

  • 21 questions in 45 minutes
  • Only Problem Solving format
  • Calculator available but use strategically
  • No geometry = more focus on logical reasoning
  • Success = Accuracy + Speed + Strategic thinking

Topic Priority Ranking:

  1. High Priority: Arithmetic fundamentals, basic algebra
  2. Medium Priority: Word problems, rate problems, statistics
  3. Lower Priority: Advanced combinatorics, complex probability

๐Ÿš€ Ready for Lesson 1.2?

Now that you understand exactly what’s tested, you’re ready to learn the strategic approaches that will maximize your score efficiency.

Coming up in Lesson 1.2: Master the three game-changing strategies that top scorers use: Estimation, Backsolving, and Strategic Number Plugging.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: Bookmark this lesson as your go-to reference throughout your GMAT prep journey. The topics and strategies outlined here form the foundation of everything that follows.