Thank you for your help on th AWA Essay
section of the GMAT. I appreciate the scathing critique that
you gave me on my first essay! I learned more from that critique
than all of the other prep-work combined. Without a tremendous
quantity of work, I followed your suggestions, felt confident
in my test-taking, just recieved my results, and got a 5.0 on
the AWA portion. I am very pleased!
Mark Moeller
USA
September 20, 2001 |
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I wanted
to thank you for this site and the availability of materials.
The AWA section was right on track as it allowed me to give a
strong argument and excellent analysis. It made me think of all
the aspects of a topic rather than just a few.
Thanks
again.
Paul. Johnson,
New York, USA
...By
the way, I have bought your articles about the AWA, they are
great. Thank you a lot and I will recommend you guys to my friends
here in China.
Y. Zheng,
P.R. China
THANK YOU! My score went from a 2 on
my first test to a 5... Your templates made writing the essays
much easier...
David Isaacson
Kansas City, USA
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The GMAT Essay Section

The Analytical Writing Assessment
(AWA) is how business schools evaluate your
writing skills. The AWA section has two 30-minute essay questions.
One essay is the "Analysis of Issue," in which you
state your opinion on an issue. The second is the "Analysis
of Argument," in which you analyze the reasoning in an argument.
The two essays require completely different strategies.
How the E-rater
Is Used
Before February 1999, two human
graders would grade your essays. If they disagreed, it went to
a third grader. Under the new system, a human and the E-rater
will grade your essay. If the human and E-rater agree on a score,
that's the grade your essay will receive. If they disagree, a
second human will grade the essay to resolve any differences.
The computerized grading system
pressures human graders to follow the E-rater's strict standards.
Human graders are aware that there is a computer double-checking
their work, and they are more likely to follow the E-rater's
strict grading parameters.
How to tackle
the Analytical Writing Assessment
Students tend to under-prepare for the AWA section.
This is ironic because it is the one GMAT section where a small
amount of preparation can make a huge difference on test day.
You don't want your embarrassing AWA grade coming up in a business
school interview. To beat the AWA, you must learn how to write
in a highly disciplined and concise manner.
- Be particularly
concerned with structure. Clearly divide
your essay into the introductory paragraph, two to three content
paragraphs, and a conclusion. Take time out before you start
writing to set up an organizational structure. Our Essay Guide
includes sample essay templates for the Issue and Argument essays.
- Use transitional
phrases such
as "first," "therefore," and "because"
to help the computer identify concepts between and within the
paragraphs.
Make
sure you spell these transition words correctly so that the computer
can identify them. The E-rater does not have a spell-checker
built in.
- Be a conformist.
The E-rater
is not programmed to appreciate individuality, humor, or poetic
inspiration; it will be comparing the style and structure of
your essay to that of other high-scoring essays. If your essay looks like the high-scoring
essays in the E-rater's memory banks, you will get a high grade;
if not, you will get a low grade. Our Essay Guide has
20 sample high score essays to give you a sense of the proper
writing style for the AWA.
- Clearly state
your critique in the Analysis of Argument essay. The Analysis of Argument
question will show you an essay loaded with logical fallacies,
such as the unwarranted assumption or fallacy of equivocation. These are buzzwords that the E-rater
detects to see if you have correctly identified the argument's
logical flaws.
- Know the
essays and how to answer them.
The Essay Guide shows you all of the 275 actual GMAT essay
questions and 20 selected sample answers to those essay questions.
This will give you a feel for the essay questions and how they
should be answered.
- Write in
effective American style.
Both the human and the E-rater will detect poor writing style.
The E-rater's memory banks have essays written in American grammar/style,
which is slightly distinct from the English used outside of the
United States.
- Practice,
Practice, Practice. Try
to do the essays in the 30-minute time frame. That is half the challenge. Always practice
under timed conditions on a computer or take
our practice essays for grading.
Our
Essay Section & E-Rater Guide is
designed to prepare you for the test. We've also put years of
experience from grading thousands of practice essays into our
essay grading service.
The guide is based on information
from essay graders and developers of computerized essay grading
technology. Based on our observations, students who use the Essay
Guide score about two
points higher, on a scale
from zero to six, than those who do not. Here's what the Essay
Guide contains:
1. AWA
Basics
- Analysis of Issue: how to tackle
it
.
- Analysis of Argument: how to
identify logical fallacies commonly used in essay questions,
such as the unwarranted assumption or the fallacy of
equivocation.
- How international students should
prepare for the essay section.
- 10 Most Common Errors: in the
thousands of essays we have graded, 10 errors recur.
2. How
the E-Rater Works
- How the E-rater program works.
- What not to do: Seven common
errors writers make with the E-rater.
3. Organizational
Tips: How to Structure Your Essays
- Pace schedules for both essay
types so that you get everything done in time.
- Templates for both essay types
to help structure your essays.
4. How to
Write Effectively
- Basic rules of grammar that
you must know.
- How to write effective and concise
arguments.
- Writing drills and exercises
to test your writing skills.
5. Answers
to the Real Essay Questions
- See all of the 275 real AWA
questions beforehand.
- Read up to 20 sample answers
to actual GMAT essay questions. Use these to get an idea of how
to write your essays.
6. Application
Essay Writing Guide (New)
- 50-page guide about writing
application essays to MBA programs. Learn how to write an appealing
application essay, explain your past failures and highlight your
career successes.
>> Start your preparation in five minutes... get the Essay Section
& E-Rater Guide
>> Option #2: Complete
Prep Course ($48 value for
$29)
With the Complete
Prep Course, you get
the Essay Section Guide, plus 5 GMAT CATs,
the Online Guide to the Math and Verbal sections and 24-Hour
Tutor support >>
>> Essay Grading Service: take practice essay questions
and send them in for grading and review
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