CONTACT US cflogic.careerforum.in cf12plus.careerforum.in cfwings.careerforum.in
   CF Courses
   Post-A-Query
   Utilities
   CF Blogs
   Event Calender
   Share this page
 

ABOUT SSL CERTIFICATES
 
LATEST NEWS
28th August 2010 / Times of India / Mumbai Edition
Career Forum : News Archive

IIMs reveal CAT marking system

Mumbai: For the first time under the online competitive Common Admission Test (CAT) process, Indian Institutes of Management have revealed how they mark candidates. Not everything depends on how you perform;what also matters is the difficulty level of the paper you take. IIMs along with Prometric have devised a formula to equalise the scores of candidates taking the varied versions of the test. In fact, this year, IIMs will also allow management aspirants to change the date and the venue of sitting for the exam as well.

Himanshu Rai, chairman of CAT 2010 committee, told TOI, We are allowing candidates to change the test taking location and time till September 30. But a new venue and time slot will be given based on availability. The IIMs have also worked out a method of fair assessment, for the CAT will use multiple test papers.

However, the difficulty of the content may very slightly with every paper, but will be comparable. To facilitate fair comparison, each form will contain a small number of items that will be shared with one or more other forms. These items are termed as equator blocks. By comparing responses to these equator block items across multiple forms the candidates ability level will be evaluated and the precise difficulty of the forms calculated, stated the IIMs, in a release.

Later, equated raw scores will be placed on a common scale to ensure appropriate interpretation of the scores, a process called scaling.

Officials have revealed that raw scores will be calculated for every section based on the number of questions the candidate has correctly or incorrectly answered and also omitted. Three points are given for each correct answer and one negative point for each incorrect answer. There will be no points for questions that are not answered.

A CAT paper comprises three sections and each will be evaluated and four scaled scores given to each candidate. A high score in one section, though, will not guarantee the candidate high scores in the others. The percentile rankings will remain constant. They will be provided for each individual section as well as for the overall exam score.

Copyright © Career Forum Ltd. All rights reserved
Career Forum
SNAPsprint MBAsprint MATsprint