Common Admission Test
From ePedia, the electronic encyclopedia
Common Admission Test (CAT) is an all-India test conducted by the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) as an entrance test for the management programmes of its six business schools. The term is also used for the admission test for the Cochin University of Science and Technology.
The IIMs CAT is almost certainly the world's most demanding entrance examination for any graduate institute. The test taker is expected to excel in arithmetical problem solving, geometry, statistics, data interpretation, logical reasoning in solving complex puzzles, and English language skills. The test is held on the third Sunday of November for a duration of two hours.
It is neither expected, nor possible, that all the questions be answered, so the CAT also tests candidates' ability to prioritise under pressure: a quality necessary in the competitive environment of IIMs courses. Also CAT has become notorious for the surprise elements they have every year.
150,000 students compete for less than 1200 general seats in the IIM's which makes it even more selective than all the Ivy League Universities put together. Even with a top 1% score, a candidate must also win through the equally stringent group and individual interviews.
The IIMs CAT is almost certainly the world's most demanding entrance examination for any graduate institute. The test taker is expected to excel in arithmetical problem solving, geometry, statistics, data interpretation, logical reasoning in solving complex puzzles, and English language skills. The test is held on the third Sunday of November for a duration of two hours.
It is neither expected, nor possible, that all the questions be answered, so the CAT also tests candidates' ability to prioritise under pressure: a quality necessary in the competitive environment of IIMs courses. Also CAT has become notorious for the surprise elements they have every year.
150,000 students compete for less than 1200 general seats in the IIM's which makes it even more selective than all the Ivy League Universities put together. Even with a top 1% score, a candidate must also win through the equally stringent group and individual interviews.
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