by StaceyKoprince Mon May 26, 2008 10:49 am
You are allowed to take the test 5 times in a calendar year. The scores are officially valid. (And, in case you care to know, Pearson simply administers the test - they have nothing to do with any test-taking or test-making policies. That's GMAC.)
BUT schools can interpret the scores any way they want and some schools (not all, but some) choose to "downgrade" their assessment of a tester's GMAT score if s/he has taken it more than X number of times (X can also vary - 3, 4, 5...). Some schools don't do this at all - they only look at your highest score. An admissions department can choose to look at any part of your application however it wants. You can contact the admissions departments of the schools to which you'd like to reply to ask how they view X number of tests.
Also, a GMAT score will never actually get you admitted to a school. You could get an 800 and still be rejected. The GMAT score is typically used as a "threshold" indicator - does the school think you can handle the work there? If so, then they'll assess the rest of your application (essays, recommendations, etc) and typically make the yes/no decision based upon that stuff. Don't get sucked into thinking that if you can just get the best GMAT score, you'll definitely get in - that's not the case.
Finally, re: improving, it is certainly the case that people can improve significantly from the 4th to the 5th administration of a test. It is statistically much less likely than improving significantly between, say, the first and the second, but people can (and have) done it. The one thing to keep in mind: if a tester continues to do things the same way, then it's unlikely s/he will see much improvement. If whatever you have been doing hasn't gotten you the score you want so far, then you need a new method of approach.
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep