GMAT
MATH
RULES
EMPOWER SUMMARY
EMPOWERgmat™
MAXIMUM IMPROVEMENT MADE EFFICIENT
Section Question Type Category NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT
Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
ALL MATH RULES treatment of any subject herein.
NUMBER PROPERTIES
The most powerful EMPOWER tactic for the Quantitative section of the GMAT
WHY learn Number Properties:
1. Number properties occur on approximately 10 questions, so they have a significant impact on your Quant Score.
2. NPs show up heavily in DS questions, so knowing NPs will lead to greater success on DS questions.
3. Knowing NPs will give you additional (often faster) ways to answer questions besides conventional math ap-
proaches. This knowledge will work well with TEST IT to help you to avoid pacing problems
MAJOR NUMBER PROPERTIES
(you will learn additional minor NPs in your EMPOWER Trainings and Quizzes and in the GMAC Official Guide)
even + even = even
even + odd = odd
odd + odd = even
even x even = even
even x odd = even
odd x odd = odd
positive x negative = negative
negative x negative = positive
Example:
If 0 < F < 1 and -1 < G < 0, then which of the following must be true?
(A) F – G > 1
(B) F + G > 0
(C) FG > 0
(D)
(E)
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES
MATH RULES
Fundamental Quantitative Section Content
WHY you should know math rules:
1. They affect EVERY question in the Quant section
2. They will provide you with necessary content knowledge and faster ways to do the necessary calculations
RATIOS
Ratios appear on the GMAT in 5-6 questions (about 3 problem solving and 3 DS questions) and these questions usu-
ally count! These questions require flexibility on your part (sometimes you must do math, sometimes you must use
TEST IT)
Ratios can come in many formats, so it’s important to understand that all of the following examples MEAN THE SAME
THING:
Example:
“2 men to 5 women” = 2:5 = Men/Women = 2/5 = 0.4 = 40% = “2 out of 7 people are men”
2 important things to remember about ratios:
1. Ratios are all about MULTIPLES
2. Ratios tend to be Sufficient
Example
Men : Women = 2 : 5
x1 Men = 2; Women = 5
x2 Men = 4; Women = 10
x3 Men = 6; Women = 15
x4 Men = 8; Women = 20
x 10 Men = 20; Women = 50
etc...
PERCENTS
Percents show up on the GMAT in several forms:
1. Ratios
2. Interest Rates
3. Mixtures
4. Percentage Change
5. TEST IT questions
Percents can show up as part of various formulas or concepts:
• X/Y (100%) For example: 2 out of 5 = 2/5 (100%) = 40%
• A% of B = (A/100) x B For example 30% of 20 = (30/100) x 20 = 6
• Mixtures = Part/Whole
• Percentage Change = Change/Original = (New – Old) / Old
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES
SPECIAL MATH RULES
Fundamental Quantitative Section Content
PEMDAS/Order of Operations
1. PEMDAS refers to the order in which you must perform calculations. Math must be done in this order:
2. Parentheses
3. Exponents
4. Multiplication & Division (going left to right)
5. Addition & Subtraction (going left to right)
Absolute Value
The absolute value signs signal that you are to express the result of the contents as a positive number.
Example:
| -3 | = 3
Example:
|x - 3| = 5
x = 8 or -2
BUNCHING
When adding a group of numbers or multiplying a group of numbers, the order doesn’t matter. With a large enough
group of numbers, bunching can usually create a math pattern/shortcut that you can use to answer the question.
Example:
When adding up the numbers from 1 to 10 (inclusive), you could add them up in order (which would take awhile and
you might make a math mistake). Instead, try bunching the biggest and smallest numbers, then the next biggest and
next smallest, and so on. You’ll notice that a pattern emerges. It’s faster and easier than adding the numbers up in
order.
ROUNDING
When rounding (or “approximating”) numbers:
Round down when the digit is 0 through 4
Round up when the digit is 5 through 9
For example, 14.5682 could be rounded to…
15 (the nearest integer)
14.6 (the nearest tenth)
14.57 (the nearest hundredth)
14.568 (the nearest thousandth)
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES
SPECIAL MATH RULES
Fundamental Quantitative Section Content
DIGITS
• The word “digit” refers to each “space” in a value.
• A digit can be 0 – 9, so a 1-digit number could only be one of those 10 values
• A 2-digit number must be between 10 and 99
• A 3-digit number must be between 100 and 999
• Etc.
SPECIAL DIVISION RULES
When multiplying or dividing by a negative number, an inequality changes “direction”.
Example:
-2x > 10
Divide both sides by – 2 and change the direction of the inequality
x < -5
Rules to know for faster division:
2: A number is divisible by 2 if it ends in 2, 4, 6, 8 or 0
3: A number is divisible by 3 if the sum of its digits is divisible by 3
4: A number is divisible by 4 if the 2-digit number at the end is divisible by 4
5: A number is divisible by 5 if it ends in 5 or 0
6: A number is divisible by 6 if it’s divisible by 2 AND 3
9: A number is divisible by 9 if the sum of its digits is divisible by 9
PRIME NUMBERS
Prime numbers are divisible by only 2 things: themselves and the number 1.
A partial list of Primes, starting with the smallest:
2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, etc.
Note: 0 and 1 are NOT Primes
Prime Factorization is a math concept that you MIGHT use ONCE on Test Day. The concept is that integers greater
than 1 are either Prime number or a series of Primes multiplied together. For example:
13 is Prime
14 is a series of Primes multiplied (2 x 7)
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES
SPECIAL MATH RULES
Fundamental Quantitative Section Content
FACTORS & MULTIPLES
Factors are numbers that divide into other numbers
The Factors of 30: 1, 30, 2, 15, 3, 10, 5, 6
Multiples are numbers that are a base number multiplied by an integer
The Multiples of 30: 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, etc.
Note: 1 is a factor of EVERY integer and 0 is multiple of EVERY integer
Note: Every number is a FACTOR of itself and a MULTIPLE of itself
REMAINDERS
Remainders are the “leftover pieces” when doing division. In remainder questions, there is NO decimal and NO frac-
tion, there is only the remainder.
For example
7/4 = 1 remainder 3 = 1 r 3
SEQUENCES
Sequences measure your ability to follow instructions and paraphrase. The key to understanding sequences is under-
standing sequence notation.
Example:
1, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16, 19...
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES
SPECIAL MATH RULES
Fundamental Quantitative Section Content
EXPONENTS
You need to know the following exponent rules:
RADICALS
You need to know the following radical rules: Examples of arithmetic with radicals:
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES
SPECIAL MATH RULES
Fundamental Quantitative Section Content
STATISTICS
When dealing with a group of numbers, arrange the numbers in order from least to greatest. Be careful about num-
bers that appear more than once and any variables that are included in a group (those variables could positive, nega-
tive, zero, big, small, decimals or duplicates of the numbers in the group).
For the group 1, 3, 3, 5, 6
Mean = average = 18/5 = 3.6
Median = middle = 3
Mode = most common = 3
Range = big – small = 5
If we add a term to the end, the values change….
For the group 1, 3, 3, 5, 6, 6
The mean = 24/6 = 4
The median = average of the middle 2 terms = (3+5)/2 = 4
The mode = 2 answers = 3 and 6
The range = 5
Standard deviation
Standard deviation is a rare concept on the GMAT (you might not see it all). The concept worth knowing is this: when
number are close together, the standard deviation is small; when numbers are farther apart, the standard deviation is
bigger.
Section Question Type Category
EMPOWERgmat™
NOTE: This packet is to be used in conjunction with the Modules in your
QUANT MATH Empower GMAT Course. This packet is NOT designed to be a complete
PS/DS treatment of any subject herein.
RULES