Archive for November, 2009

‘CAT will continue to be online next year’ – IIMA Director

cat will be online Approximately 7,000-8,000 candidates have not been able to take the computer-based CAT 2009 test due to snags in the Prometric-managed exam between Saturday and Monday, said Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Ahmedabad Director Dr Samir Barua at a press conference in Ahmedabad on Monday evening. A total of 47 testing labs failed on Saturday, another 33 labs collapsed on Sunday while about 30 labs could not administer the test on Monday, he added.

Sticking to the ‘virus attack’ theory and blaming the pitfalls of using technology, Prof Barua said, “The major reason appeared to be a virus attack. All precautions had been taken for protection against virus attack, but we did not succeed in doing so at a few labs. In some of the other centers, there were hardware problems and replacement took 2 hours.”

“There are always bound to be problems in the first time such a huge exam takes place, especially if it is concerns technology. But we are working very hard to fix all the problems and accommodate all candidates,” he added.

On rescheduling, he said, “We will try to accommodate the rescheduled tests within this week as we have a few empty slots available. But if required, we will stretch the CAT for two extra days on Dec 8 and 9.” He added that the two-day extension would be avoided, as not all of the slots in this week were running on full capacity.

“When we reschedule, the students may not be able to choose a date or slot of their convenience. Their choice will thus get restricted. We’ll try to make sure that the new slots are as convenient as per their initial choice. There would not be a single candidate who will not be able to take the test. But there will be inconvenience caused. Do we recognize and empathize with student? Yes we do. But the inconvenience is a fact of life and we cannot do anything at this stage,” he said.

On some problems reported by candidates of disturbances caused by uncooperative invigilators who continued to use their mobile phones throughout the test, Prof Barua said, “We cannot be responsible if the invigilators talk on phone. The invigilators have moral responsibility too and something like this is possible even in paper based test.”

“We believe that the ambience and environment has improved considerably since today,” he said.

CAT Convenor Satish Deodhar ruled out the IIMs reverting back to the paper-based format and added that the CAT will be continue to be conducted online next year too.

“The preparation to make this online started in April 2007 but it took time to take off because of the tender process. We will continue to go in this direction and it’s been a good beginning so far. Yes, we have somewhat failed, but we are correcting those problems now,” he added.

Asked what sort of drills Prometric had conducted to prepare for the testing, Prometric Chief Operating Officer Charlie Karnan said that they had conducted mock drills at individual centers but not on a large scale. He added that 62% of affected candidates had already been rescheduled.

On problems reported by individual students of computer errors and reboots that gave some people extra time to solve problems, Prof Barua said, “If there is a genuine reason, they should report them to the center head and it would be considered. But if the students were idling their time away while the snag was being repaired then it is not the IIMs’ responsibility.”

Meanwhile, the Union Human Resources Development Ministry asked the IIMs to submit a report on the CAT failure.

If you have faced a serious problem while taking the CAT, please enter your experience in this form and we will try to get the take of the concerned authorities.

You may also like to see a video: Pls see this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNx8wVyX8O0

Courtesy www.mbatutes.com and www.zioneducationonline.com

All the Best for what comes out finally

Vaibhav K Mittal

CEO – Zion Education Services and CAT StrategistSimilar Posts:

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CAT 2009 Live Feedback 2

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CAT 2009 Live Feedback

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CAT is out of the Bag.

papasgotabrandnewcatDear All.

I hope many of you have already heard a lot about CAT 2009 today in the first slot.

Let me cover it in more detail.

It was 100% as was predicted by us i.e. 60 Questions in all with 20 Ques in each of the 3 sections.

Going into details of each section:

English: There were 3 RCs with 3 Ques each. + 4 ques on Para Jumbles + 2 FIBs + 2 ques on Grammar(Inappropriate usuage) + 2 Ques on Para completion.

DI/LR: There were 4 ques on DS. + 3 ques on Logical reasoning(Arrangement type) + there were 3 sets each having 3 ques – these were on bar graphs + 3 sets with 2 ques each.

PS: First of all there were quite many ques which were repeat from previous CAT papers. There were all in all 4 ques on functions, 2 on geometry, 2 on P & C, 1 on SI/CI, 1 on TSD, 1 on Averages, 1 on Number system(finding remainder), 1 on Trigo(Height & Distances) etc. All in all it was a very easy Maths sections for most of our students.

Note that CAT doesn’t mentioned what is the marking scheme this year and whats the quantum of negative marking. Though the paper said that wrong question carries negative marks.

We expect on the basis of this test that cut offs should not be less then approx 13-15 questions in PS, about 13-15 ques in DI and about 14+ ques in English. All in all this was a speed paper and this was exactly what we predicted.

We suggest that in a paper like this one should attempt around 45 Ques with not less then 80% accuracy.

Keep visiting Mbatutes.com and zioneducationonline.com for more updates

All the Best

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Day 1 :- Slot 1

Dear Students,

Something about today’s paper. Students expected something they got something which was below their standards. That was feedback which we took outside Jaipuria Institute of Management Noida. Paper was very easy So go bang on. You all will be getting some good tips By Ceo Of Zion education for further slots and what he predicted was on the paper. So keep loging on mbatutes.com for further information. By evening you all will be getting something worth to read and live feedbacks from the test centre.

So Don’t miss the train. Please don’t discuss anything about Q paper or Q’s.

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Best of Luck

From tomorrow CAT will be on, so I wish you Best of Luck for your CAT exam. Don’t forget to check out the updates about Online CAT on MBAtutes.com.Similar Posts:

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Last 7 days Prior to CAT 2009- Don’t Miss

cat-2009-tipsThis time I have come up with a new way of helping you guys. I asked Vaibhav (CEO, Zion Education) to make one helping video for all the CAT aspirants who are still burning their midnight lamps. Vaibhav has more than 14 years of experience of teaching MBA aspirants, & many of his students are either in IIMs or are working in any big MNC.

So without wasting anymore time of yours, I am giving you 2 video series of  “CAT on CAT 2009″. I hope you will follow these tips.

May be I am a bit late but majority of the CAT aspirants are giving their CAT in december; so just try to follow his tips/advice, they are seriously helpful.  Please put your feedbacks/comments below which Vaibhav will answer in person. BTW, we didn’t have the tripod due to which sometimes you will feel that the camera is shaking :)

You can visit our Official Youtube Channel to watch all our videos

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Thanksgiving 2009

As Thanksgiving approaches, I decided to take inventory of all that I am thankful for.

I am thankful for my wonderful wife who has helped make me a more complete and whole person. I love her more every single day.

Every day, I thank the Lord for my son. I thank Him for keeping him safe through his NICU stay. I thank Him for helping him grow stronger every day. I thank Him for bringing him to us and for bringing him home as quickly as possible and without any equipment / stipulations.

I am thankful for all of the other members of my family – my many brothers and sister; my loving parents; my accepting brother and sister in-law; my wife’s approachable parents; my amazing grandparents; and all the extended family that cares for us. Their love and support help me every day. I am incredibly thankful to have them in my life and love them all.

I am thankful for my freedoms here in these United States. The fact that I am able to speak my mind freely, worship as I see fit, and am granted a voice in our government. This nation is still the freest in the world and I thank God on a regular basis that I was born here.

I am thankful for my friends – both new and old; both close and those who have grown apart from the distance. Their friendship, support, and sometimes just their ears have provided me with so much over the years. I am incredibly thankful for that.

I am thankful for the congregation at our local church. They are a loving body of people that actively cares for each one of us. When my wife was in the hospital prior to our son’s birth, their support and prayers meant so very much to me and did not go unnoticed.

And above all, I am thankful for my God and my Lord Jesus the Christ – who has provided me with the greatest gift of them all, salvation and everlasting life. I am proud of my faith and it has helped get me through anything that comes my way. I am overjoyed when I think of sharing my faith with my son – and can’t wait to teach him all about it.

Happy Thanksgiving to all and thank you for allowing me to share this with you.

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A Jew Who Says Merry Christmas

Note:

This will be the third time I have edited and posted this little essay. I feel the need to change it a little every year but this one is changed a bit more than usual. I am posting it before Thanksgiving this year and you’ll have to read it to find out why:

A Jew for “Merry Christmas”

I am a Jew and I have to tell you, no one is going to discourage me from celebrating Thanksgiving and Christmas this year. No, I am not loosing my Jewish identity; on the contrary, I am very sure that it is stronger than ever.


I grew up in an observant Jewish home ( I am observant still) in which we greeted Christmas with a mixture of fascination, respect and a little irritation. At some point I became fond of expressing my ambivalence by quoting Jackie Mason, who once said:

“I don’t understand something about Christmas; maybe you can explain this to me? Why is it that this time of year you Christian people bring all of the trees inside the house and take all the lights and put them outside”


That line, for many years summed up the bemusement that I affected about the whole public Christmas celebration.


My feelings were mixed for a variety of reasons. My Dad had a retail store so the weeks leading up to Christmas were always a time of tension and brutally long hours of work. The traffic on the roads, crowds in the stores, and the saturation of television (especially in those pre- cable times) and radio airwaves with Christmas programs and music were overwhelming. I found the frenzy mentally punishing, the free-floating goodwill unsettling and the talk about Jesus (in whose divinity I was not supposed to believe) uncomfortable.


It left me very glad to have it over on December 26th.

And I was always just a little unsure of how to respond when some well meaning person would wish me a Merry Christmas. I was often caught between wanting to thank him noncomittaly, try to summon a convincing Merry Christmas in return or to say,” Thanks Very much but I don’t celebrate Christmas and then have to deal with the uncomfortable silence or explanations and apologies.


I am ashamed to admit it today but I was, at first, pleased when I saw, over the years, the ACLU and Multi-culti types pushing “Merry Christmas” out of the vocabulary of cultural discourse in favor of the more generic “Happy Holidays”.


I’ve grownup, though, and I’ve grown into a new perspective on this whole question and, today, when someone wishes me a Merry Christmas, I have a new response. It’s really simple-

I stop what I am doing

I don’t have any hesitation or second thoughts.

I wish them a great big “Merry Christmas” in return.


I would like to encourage all my fellow Jews to join me in this. Here’s why:

I have come to see quite clearly that even if there are politically correct, multi-cultural, morally relativistic, post modern progressive busybodies who would like us to believe that our Christian friends’ and Neighbors’ spontaneous Christmas wishes are somehow injurious to us and our culture, they are nothing of the kind. A sincere “Merry Christmas is more American and better for the republic and her people than the blandest, most guarded “Happy Holidays”


You see, the U.S. was founded by Christians. Not just any Christians. The early colonists were both devout and independent. They were fervent Protestants whose purpose in coming here was to leave the Kings, Priests, state religions and archaic laws of the Old World behind.


Even if some of them were supersessionists and dogmatic, they were also egalitarian and self-reliant. They came here to build a country where every man could read scripture for himself and be his own priest- where he could be free to elect political leadership that he could follow gladly. Ultimately, that experiment gave rise to the constitution and form of government we have today. At over two hundred years old, it is still the one in the entire world that best honors the individual and guarantees most rights to any individual who accepts the constitutional responsibilities of a citizen.


It was those fiercely independent Protestants who set the tone for the nation in which we now live. Their fierce spiritual presumption of the liberty of the human soul is, still today, the great central mast that lifts the canopy of democracy and holds it above us as a sanctuary from the despotism and effete decay that afflicts most of the rest of the world.


Crystallized in the constitution, the devotion of deeply religious people and spiritually awakened souls like Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams are what have made it the highest standard of self rule and freedom in the history of the human race.


Among all their other unique achievements the fact that they decided that there could be no Official Religion in a country that aimed not just at physical or intellectual freedom shows that they understood that full human freedom means spiritual freedom too- Freedom of Religion.


To honor their genius fully we have to understand that Freedom of Religion must never be allowed to be a mandate for Freedom from Religion. As a Jew, I am exquisitely aware that freedom to practice my form of religion exists in this country because of those Christians and their vision of what a Christian country should stand for.


This uniquely Christian openness is why America has become the destination of choice for any one wishing to escape repression or lack of opportunity elsewhere in the world. That’s why Jews have gravitated here for two hundred years. But we all (Christians, Jews, Muslims and Atheists) are in danger of forgetting how this all works and I think this whole “anti-Merry Christmas” thing is a symptom of that amnesia.


Fortunately, though, Jews do have a collective memory of stories if we just listen to them. My grandfather told me stories about life in turn-of-the(last)–century Eastern Europe so I have some idea of what he escaped by coming here. And its not just that he was not in Zhitomir, his Ukrainian home town, thirty years after he left for America, when the Waffen SS slaughtered thirty six thousand Jews there in one day! That is a gift indeed but it is in and of the past. No, it is the gift of equality and the opportunity to prosper that still lives on. It is that continuing gift that sustains the American dream and should call upon our constant love and loyalty.


The United States of America, as conceived by her Protestant founders, has been a miracle and a blessing to the entire human race. It has been especially important to the Jewish people.


We Jews are barely over one percent of the population here. We (a lot of us anyway) take pride in our contribution to America’s dynamism. We point with satisfaction to the fact that the founding fathers of this country were inspired and informed by our holy book which they called The Old Testament. Many of them read it in the original Hebrew, something few of us “modern” Jews can do.

But why do I need to explain this? Why don’t we all understand the centrality of the Protestant ethic to the goodness of America? Partly, it’s because of a lack in the educational program. But it’s also because our media, whose responsibility it should be to make us aware of the important ideas, events and issues has other agendas. Our “Mainstream” media is often found to be doing just the opposite.


In the media, America is assailed daily for her imperfections; and if not assailed, then damned by the faintest of praise. The media emphasizes the imperfections instead of the achievements- the discords not the harmony.


Historical revisionism has been used by the joyless progressives, secular humanists and multiculturalists to sap the joy and meaning out of Thanksgiving and the goodwill out of Christmas.


It has even come to pass that our President goes abroad and cannot seem to visit another country without some pathetic apology for America’s past- as if there is any country on earth whose history is so pristine that they are in a position to judge.


I am only one Jew- not a Rabbi and not a spokesman for a community organization, just a simple Jew. Nevertheless, I would like to call on all Jews, indeed, all Christians, Muslims and whoever else will standup with me and celebrate the blessing that The United States of America is to us and to the human family. Let us bow our heads together this Thanksgiving and resolve that instead of fretting about how saying “Merry Christmas” might make us an overly Christian country, we will thank our own, private God that we live in this country where “Happy Thanksgiving” and “Merry Christmas” mean what they mean here.


We need to loosen up and get a perspective on this “Merry Christmas” thing. It is not the people who say “Merry Christmas” and mean it that we need to be discouraging in America at this time. It is the people who find something wrong and suspect in the energy, enthusiasm and good-will that animates that “Merry Christmas” that we need to discourage.


We must side with our fellow Americans, the overwhelming majority of whom are warm-hearted friends with morals and ethics or we will have become unwitting dupes to heartless enemies with no moral compass who think they can rationalize almost anything and undermine our great civilization with reasonable sounding, non-judgmental sophistry. Do you need a moment to think about that?


By saying “Merry Christmas” in public we are not necessarily agreeing that Jesus was the son of God, we are just acknowledging that some very good people believe it. When we say it, that does not constitute accepting Jesus as our personal savior; it does show his followers that we see them as fellow countrymen, friends and brothers-in-arms in the defense of the highest ideals of our civil society and Judeo-Christian culture. What is the problem with that?


The first four words of this essay “I am a Jew”, are exactly the words that Daniel Pearl was forced to say on camera just before he was pinned down and his head was sawn off. I’d like you to try a little thought experiment simulating a better world here- Pretend that the next sentence that I write followed that first one and I had no need for the rest of the explanation in between…

“Have a Merry Christmas”

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Suggestions to Draft – Susan Schwab

In 2006, John Sarbanes was elected to Congress in the Maryland’s 3rd Congressional District. Sarbanes was a lawyer who had high name recognition as the son of former US Senator Paul Sarbanes. His 2006 opponent was Compass Marketting CEO John White, who received over 33% of the vote. In 2008, in a poor year for Republicans, Sarbanes won reelection against an insurance broker with no name recognition and no website. His opponent still received over 30% of the vote. In a year where Republicans are angry and ready to actively get out the vote and fight for Congress the GOP needs a solid candidate to beat Sarbanes. I feel that Susan Schwab may be that candidate.

Susan Schwab served as US Trade Representative from 2006 until 2009. She’s a strong proponent of free trade and benefits from having nationwide name recognition. Prior to her tenure as US Trade Representative, Schwab was the President and CEO of the University System of Maryland Foundation from 2003 to 2006 and Dean of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland, College Park from 1995 to 2003. This statewide experience shows her commitment to the state of Maryland through her support.

Schwab’s elected politics experience is not extensive. Schwab worked in throughout the 1980s as trade policy specialist and then legislative director for former Senator John C. Danforth.

She’s motivated to work for solutions equitable to all sides involved – as seen by her handling of the US-Canada Softwood Lumber Dispute. She’s got a sense of humor, as seen in her telling Charlie Rangel on Valentine’s Day that she’d be his Valentine while testifying before Congress. She’s a free trade dynamo who fought hard for bipartisan free trade deals.

Schwab is highly intelligent and motivated. Her experiences and story could make her a compelling candidate, especially in a year where the economy is of grave importance. Her experiences in international trade and business experience make her a perfect candidate to discuss economic issues. I feel that this current member of the FedEx board of Directors could be a great candidate for the NRCC to seek out.

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