Tuesday, August 27, 2019

here's the power of philosophy in a few charts (GMAT, LSAT, and GRE scores) including $alary!


Above is the Graduate Management Admission Test, a computer adaptive test intended to assess analytical, writing, quantitative, verbal, and reading skills in written English for use in admission to a graduate management program, such as MBA programs. This is sort of your MBA "bread and butter."

Above you have the results for the LSAT (entrance to Law School). Look at Philosophy with the arrow.  It has the highest Mean High (159.47) and Median High (160).


Computing the Average LSAT shows Philosophy in Number 1! 


Above are the GRE Verbal scores measure the ability to read and interpret. It includes both spoken and written communication. Very important in pursuing careers in all the Humanities & journalism. Also very important for interpersonal skills in management positions.


GRE Analytical, is essential for many different types of jobs in a variety of fields, including Business Analytics, Data Architecture, Data Sciences, Marketing, Project Management, Accounting, Business Development, Programming, Law, Medicine, and all the sciences.


Quantitative reasoning is the application of basic mathematics skills, such as arithmetic, algebra, geometry, etc, to the analysis and interpretation of real-world quantitative information in the context of any discipline.


GRE composite score is determined by combining your total scores for Verbal Reasoning and Quantitative Reasoning, each scored on a scale of 130-170. GRE composite scores are important for graduate or business school admission and an aspect of your application admission officers weigh with great consideration.

How about salary?


Not bad.

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