Posts Tagged CAT 2009

‘CAT’astrophe 2009

Epiphany hit me on 28th October 2009, that I could take a chance at CAT, fortunately for me then 30th for the last date for application and I quietened down. The next I heard of it was on 9th, when 10th was the last day (after extension), either way it so happened that karma prevented me from buying a lottery worth Rs. 1400! unfortunately the 3 Lakh other students did.

Comments and relevances on how CAT 2009 was a horrible experience for most floated on every article I read, here are the few interesting ones that are suffice for a bird’s eye of the fiasco.

In CAT, a single 5 second concentration lapse can cost you 5%ile! And all such disturbances definitely caused me at least 4 – 5 concentration lapses!

from Youth Curry

Each had their own account to share. While for some, the problem began with the system rejecting their password, others reported the screen going blank. Some others had to contend with screens where words appeared but pictures went missing. This was not all. Some students suffered a setback while proceeding with the test, which ended abruptly after they answered three/four questions. Abhinav, a student from PGDAV, said, “My computer hung for 10 minutes and it unnerved me. Even if we are offered a second opportunity, we can never approach it with the same attitude with which we had come prepared.” – TOI

The server crashes at various test centers made much noise and news in the media, coupled with the almost inconvinient constraints put up on the test takers. Arrival at least 2 hours in advance, no adequate water or restroom facilities for 5 hours at a stretch, erring test application that either died on someone or closed upon will (by mistake of course!). The margin that Prometric left for student erorrs in amazing and equally amazing the time they spent rectifying it, opening and closing the “edit” link in the registration forms online. (see here).

Prometric not only messed up CAT 2009 per say but is also is the direct cause of ripples of problem caused by the main event going awry. Many recall the torture of having to take the test rescheduled and if they came travelled from a distant city to take this test? Well, they are to make good of it on their own as far as additional boarding and lodging expenses for the extended stay goes. Even more, Prometric expected students to pull a la superman stunt by scheduling retests in a day or two in different cities (see here).

Press releases from Prometric were nothing more than a soothing balm applied on the burn that many had to bite their cheeks and endure without much options but we are talking at minimum graduate students here, and anyone with basic common sense can catch the covering up act in Prometric’s words…

The result files produced during an exam are encrypted prior to being written to disk. This procedure enhances the security of the content and provides a degree of protection from virus infection and/or destruction. Any such tampering with the files would be detected when the test results are imported into the data processing system and subsequent item analysis.

To which a commenter on Youth Curry blog reasoned thus…

Some viruses write random data on the hard disk sectors and can literally corrupt any file type. I don’t think some viruses are “so nice” that they look at a file format and then decide to corrupt it. But, what would non technical people know about such things ? They are busy teaching their students about looting others money and then shamefully waiting for a bailout!!

Also,

For a country like India, which boasts of its IT prowess, Saturday’s test failure has thrown up uncomfortable and embarrassing questions. However, Soumitra Roy, director, Prometric (one of the test organisers), dismissed it as a case of “isolated technical issues.”

Implementation of a secure Operating System (hint hint something non-windows) nationwide is an almost impossible task, especially so for this event (across 32 cities), so they decided to bite the bullet and go ahead using what they had on hands anyway – Windows. Its about time that the nation wakes to the fact that there is no way Windows even in the near future can be secure, heck, viruses are written for Windows. Another area they failed terribly at was scaling, scaling the software for 3 lakh students designated to take the vital exam that was to decide their career’s course.

It’s very uncertain how correct are the results of the test taken stored in Prometric’s “propreitery” file types, so here we are having nothing to do but wait, will the next batch of nation’s entreprenuers and managers be the creme of the intellect that IIM’s intend to take in everytime? or shall it be a case of collective good luck of a few thousand individuals?

If you have any relevant CAT 2009 experience to share, please word them all in the comments below!

Share on Facebook

, ,

No Comments

Mentoring students online – The Hindu Story on MentorPolis.com

The post as it appeared in The Hindu – Chennai and Hyderabad Edition on 31st August 2009.

Hindu MentorPolis Article

Hindu MentorPolis Article

If collegemates meet up, they would probably discuss favourite spots on campus, or talk about their professors, or possibly recall funny anecdotes that their batch witnessed. But this four, who are alumni of the Indian Institute of Technology – Delhi, went beyond.

Anshuman Chaudhary, Avijit Sharma, Anshul Aggarwal and Pratik Aggarwal of IIT-Delhi, who were lucky to have very helpful seniors, realised that not all students had mentors to help them through the challenging decision-making phase that is part of college life.

“While most students follow what others around them are doing, they may be unaware of their true potential and opportunities that exist in the outside world,” says Anshuman, who works from Mumbai, with his other three Delhi-based colleagues.

Thus was born www.mentorpolis.com — a portal that seeks to help students and professionals looking for advice on higher education or career. “Mentors not only help people in identifying the most suitable places for them, they also guide them to reach those places.”

The portal enables visitors to obtain Career guidance from experts in different fields. Course-specific mentoring as well strategy-based mentoring is provided by a panel of mentors representing different academic disciplines and professions.

“When we started, our own IIT seniors and their secondary contacts were the first buyers of idea and were enrolled as mentors. Hence, the starting point was engineering and management,” says Anshuman.

How it works

MentorPolis boasts of mentors from top institutions such as Harvard Business School, Stern School, New York City, Stanford and Yale.

Considering that mentoring is a continuous process demanding systematic interaction and consistency in guidance, it could be a challenging service, particularly when it is offered online.

Aware of this challenge, team MentorPolis employs a mix of web and telephone-based counselling process. A candidate seeking guidance could browse the site and look at mentor profiles. After this, they could select a suitable mentor, schedule communication, pay for the consultation request and subsequently keep connecting with the mentor.

Once a call is scheduled, MentorPolis dials out to both the mentor as well as the ‘mentee’ to connect them on phone. The subsequent follow-up, rescheduling and document transfer, if any, takes place online. “We provide an online collaboration space for the mentor and ‘mentee’ to interact after they are finished with the telephonic consultation. Such a collaborative environment ensures that the ‘mentee’ is in continuous touch with the mentor for any future guidance or doubts.” The team is also working on an offline model to serve people who are not very comfortable with web as a medium.

In a span of three months, over 700 ‘mentees’ have registered with MentorPolis. The users are mostly from the Tier-1 and Tier-2 cities. “Our team has already started the marketing campaign in the Tier-2 cities, as these are the places where our need is felt the most.”

Interestingly, quite a few people abroad have also shown interest in the services and have registered for them.

The young team of entrepreneurs, which has worked out an interesting revenue model, seems quite eager to make sure candidates get the best. ‘Web Seminars’ featuring the mentor panel are also offered free for all registered users. “We want to make the right kind of advice available for candidates when it matters the most!”

MEERA SRINIVASAN ”

You can access this article here.

Share on Facebook

, , , , , , , , , , , ,

No Comments

Roadmap to Online CAT 2009 – 2nd MentorPolis Webinar

Delivering on our promise of creating more value for our mentees at every stage, following are some pointers from our mentor—Arnav Sinha

Before any of you get all worked up because of the change in format of CAT to an online one from this year, please realize that the fundamental areas that CAT has been testing applicants in would not change. The candidates will still have to prove their aptitude in mathematics, English language and reasoning and data-interpretation. If you understand that, you’d realize that the pattern of preparation really does not change too much.

Basic Preparation Tips for the next 3-4 months:


RC

- 1. Speed-read through moderately long passages on a variety of topics (including ones that you don’t find interesting) and evaluate how much you are able to retain at the end. Try to improve on it everyday.
2. Reading through online editions of magazines like Economist or Time would help in terms of developing comfort with reading text on the screen.

VA

- 1. Do not waste time mugging up the GRE word-list.
2. Converse in English as much as possible, maybe start writing a blog regularly on topics you find worth talking about, avoid use of SMS-English while writing – essentially develop familiarity with the language.

QA

- 1. If you haven’t done it till now, do cover the entire mathematics syllabus from the course material provided by any of the standard coaching classes. You could also spend some time with the relevant textbooks from school, if there’s any area you are finding particularly difficult.
2. While analyzing a test paper always try to think of a shorter method to solve every question, even the ones you got right in a few seconds.

DI/Reasoning

- 1. Get comfortable with a variety of ways to portray complicated data. If you keep yourself from getting intimidated with some weird looking chart or table in the paper, you would realize that in most cases the scarier the data looks, the easier the questions are.
2. Even for genuinely difficult case-lets, try to identify one or two of the easier questions, which can earn you some valuable marks.

a. For all these sections, practice using sectional tests, rather than solving the entire paper all the time.

b. Do not take more than 3-4 tests in a week. It’s important that you don’t get bored with the process.

c. Join at least one (and one is generally enough) of the national-level test series that are held simultaneously across India every weekend. The rest of the tests during the week can be old papers that you can get from a senior, buy from a coaching class or anywhere else in the market.

d. Analyse. Analyse. Analyse. Spend at least 4 hours or so, preferably on the same day, analysing a 2 hour paper. Mark all the careless mistakes you made and lost marks pointlessly in (including not attempting a question just because it looked difficult or was from an area you are scared of). Find shorter methods of solving questions. Ensure your mistakes aren’t repeated the next time.

e. As far as reading material is concerned, the stuff given by any standard coaching class is good enough.

f. Finally, enjoy the process. Treat a test paper as an extended form of a puzzle – a crossword or a sudoku – that you would solve for leisure while reading a newspaper.

And, goes without saying, please feel free to get in touch with me or other mentors available at Mentorpolis for any clarifications or help.

Delivering on our promise of creating more value for our mentees at every stage, following are some pointers from our mentor—Pratik Agarwal
Share on Facebook

, , ,

No Comments