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A Magnified View of MAH CET 2015 Paper

Shubhangi Pandey updated on : 10 Mar, 2015 9

Directorate of Technical Education (DTE), Maharashtra conducts its Common Entrance Test (MAH-MBA/MMS-CET) for admission to MBA/MMS and PGDBM/PGDM courses offered in various institutes in Maharashtra. About 300 institutes across 11 Universities in Maharashtra accept admission to their MBA/MMS/PGDM programs through CET. This year the CET will be conducted on 14th and 15th March, 2015 in multiple time slots. CET, since 2014, has become a computer-based test but the pattern of the test remains similar to the paper-based test.

The test comprises of 200 questions from three broad sections (Quantitative Aptitude, Verbal Ability and Reading Comprehension, and Logical/Abstract Reasoning) and a student needs to attempt them in 150 minutes. There is no demarcation among questions from different sections; one can easily find an RC passage sandwiched between a set on Data Interpretation and Syllogisms. The fact that the test has no negative marking provides much needed respite to the candidates. Given the number of questions, CET is clearly a test of your speed and accuracy.

 

 

Given below is a general overview of the exam:

Area

Number of questions

Difficulty level

Quantitative Ability

45-55

Easy-Moderate

Logical Reasoning

90-95

Moderate

Verbal Ability and Reading Comprehension

55-65

Moderate

Total

200

Moderate

 

Quantitative Ability

Of around 50 questions from this area, about 20 questions are based on Arithmetic and Geometry (including a few questions each from Probability and Algebra). The questions vary from easy to moderate in terms of difficulty. Data Interpretation forms a major chunk of this area with generally four sets of 5 questions each. About 5 questions each from Data Sufficiency and comparison of quantities are also seen.

Area

Number of questions

Arithmetic & Geometry

15 – 20

Data Interpretation

20-25

Data Sufficiency

5

Quantitative comparison

5

Total

50-55

* Based on previous years pattern

The best way to tackle a CET quantitative question is to solve them logically than mathematically and by using the method of elimination. Certainly, the students need to have basic fundamentals of mathematics in place to solve any quantitative question using logic.

Data interpretation in CET is calculation intensive based on graphs and tables from which the students need to reap relevant data. Most common mistake the students commit is grabbing the wrong data. Practicing a few approximation techniques is advisable.

While attempting data sufficiency questions students should first memorise the five answer choices and then start doing the questions. It is quite common to make a high number of errors while answering these questions as one of the answer choices is invariably: "The question cannot be answered." Few things that should be kept in mind while answering these questions are: Do not carry over any information from one statement to the other one and take positive as well as negative values while solving inequalities with variable 'x'.

Logical/Abstract Reasoning

With a total of 90 questions, this section constitutes a little less than half of the entire paper. Generally, about 10-15 questions will be quite time consuming and the trick is to identify the easy questions and not waste time on the difficult one. 25-30 questions from Visual Reasoning can prove to be a problem area if the students do not have enough practice in the same. Analytical puzzles based on arrangements and relations generally contribute to about 30 questions, most of which are easy to moderate level difficult. Generally 5 questions each on series and Decision Criteria are also seen. The remaining questions on Series, Input/Output, Blood Relations, Coding/Decoding, Data Sufficiency, and Syllogisms range from easy to moderate in terms of level of difficulty.

Area

Number of questions

Analytical puzzles

25-30

Visual reasoning

25-30

Syllogism

5-10

Decision criteria

5

Series

5

Other

20-25

Total

90-95

 

Reading the questions carefully is the key to success in Logical reasoning. Analytical reasoning puzzles questions are closely linked with each other. Most of the puzzles can be represented in a tabular/matrix form and once the students get the matrix right, answering the questions become easy. Visual reasoning reflects on a person's ability to visualise elements and structures thus exhibiting students’ ability to comprehend an open-ended thought process. One of the strategies to tackle this area is to mentally formulate the problems on you own. By and large Visual reasoning requires visual grouping of various elements.

 


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