GMAT · Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning · Germany

Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning for the GMAT Exam — German candidates

8% of the GMAT test plan. Synthesizing information from 2–3 tabbed sources (text, charts, or mixed) to answer inference and evaluation questions. Calibrated for German candidates.

Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning sits at roughly 8% of the Graduate Management Admission Test content distribution — Multi-Source Reasoning (MSR) tests whether candidates can integrate information across multiple formats — a core business skill. The difficulty is that contradictions between sources are planted intentionally; candidates who read only one tab are trapped by partial information. Pass rates for the GMAT are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For German candidates preparing for GMAT, the calibration of study to local context matters: Germany operates Abitur for university entrance, Goethe / TestDaF for German proficiency, and various Cambridge tiers (FCE, CAE) for English.

Pass rates for GMAT (Germany) are published periodically by the awarding body.

Common failure modes

These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.

  • !Reading only the first tab and missing key data in subsequent tabs
  • !Treating a source's stated assumption as a proven fact
  • !Selecting an answer that is true per one source but contradicted by another

Study tips

  • 1Read all tabs before answering any question — note the type (quantitative vs qualitative) of each.
  • 2Flag explicit contradictions between sources; MSR questions often test whether you noticed them.
  • 3Practice the "what does each source add" approach: summarise each tab in one sentence before answering.
  • 4Deutsche Kandidaten, die für die GMAT lernen, profitieren von einem klaren Studienplan; deutsche Lerngewohnheiten (systematisches Vorgehen, Karteikartenarbeit) sind hier ein Vorteil.

Sample GMAT Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning questions

These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real GMAT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.

  1. 1

    Tab 1 states that Project Alpha has a budget of $2M. Tab 2 (a chart) shows Alpha spent $1.8M through Q3. Tab 3 (email) says the project will "likely exceed budget." Which inference is best supported?

    • AProject Alpha will definitely exceed its budget
    • BProject Alpha has already exceeded its budget
    • CProject Alpha has spent $1.8M and may exceed its $2M budgetCorrect
    • DThe email is unreliable because the chart shows underspending
    Why this answer?

    The chart confirms $1.8M spent (within the $2M budget so far) and the email projects a likely overrun. The best inference combines both sources. "Definitely" (A) and "already exceeded" (B) overstate the evidence.

Frequently asked questions

How much time should I allocate per Multi-Source Reasoning question set?
MSR sets typically have 3 questions sharing the same 2–3 tabbed sources. Budget about 6–7 minutes per set (roughly 2 minutes per question plus 1 minute to read all tabs initially).
What is the GMAT pass rate for German candidates?
Pass rates for GMAT candidates in Germany are published periodically by the awarding body. Practice questions, full-length simulations, and weak-area drills are the highest-impact way to improve your odds.
How long should German candidates study Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning for the GMAT?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. Germany operates Abitur for university entrance, Goethe / TestDaF for German proficiency, and various Cambridge tiers (FCE, CAE) for English. Combine Data Insights — Multi-Source Reasoning study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

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