Award-Winning GMAT Integrated Reasoning Tutors
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Award-Winning GMAT Integrated Reasoning Tutors serving Los Angeles, CA

Certified Tutor
14+ years
Caroline
Caroline's mechanical engineering background and MBA at MIT Sloan mean she's spent years pulling actionable conclusions from dense technical reports and financial models — which is precisely what GMAT Integrated Reasoning demands in a compressed format. She teaches a question-type-specific approach ...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters in Business Administration, Business Administration and Management
Washington University in St. Louis
Undergraduate degree

Certified Tutor
Allen
Allen's interdisciplinary economics training at Yale — where he constantly synthesized quantitative data alongside policy arguments — maps directly onto what GMAT Integrated Reasoning actually tests: pulling coherent conclusions from tables, graphs, and conflicting text simultaneously. He scored a 7...
Yale University
B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science

Certified Tutor
Vinay
Vinay's dual science and math-economics degrees from UCLA mean he's been synthesizing quantitative data alongside qualitative research since undergrad — exactly the hybrid skill GMAT Integrated Reasoning demands. He scored in the 99th percentile on the GMAT and teaches students a repeatable framewor...
Columbia University in the City of New York
Master in Public Health Administration, MPA in Developmental Practice
University of California Los Angeles
B.S. in Molecular, Cell, & Developmental Biology

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Albert
Albert's dual MBA from UCLA and London Business School concentrated in finance — meaning he spent years building the exact skill IR tests: pulling actionable conclusions from tables, charts, and conflicting data sources under time pressure. He teaches a structured approach to two-part analysis and m...
University of California Los Angeles
Masters in Business Administration
Wuhan University
Bachelor in Arts, Broadcast Journalism

Certified Tutor
A PhD candidate at Yale, Carl brings a medievalist's core skill to GMAT Integrated Reasoning: synthesizing information from multiple conflicting sources and drawing defensible conclusions under constraints. His teaching across six universities sharpened his ability to break down complex, multi-forma...
Yale University
PHD, Medieval Studies
Yale University
Masters
University of Georgia
Bachelors, English

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jason
As an incoming MBA student at Michigan Ross, Jason knows exactly what the GMAT's IR section is gatekeeping — the ability to make quick business decisions from messy, incomplete information. He teaches students to treat each IR prompt like a mini case study: identify the question's actual ask before ...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Business Administration

Certified Tutor
17+ years
Jackson
Jackson approaches GMAT Integrated Reasoning as a pattern-recognition exercise — each question type has a predictable structure once you learn to spot it. His doctoral-level analytical training, combined with genuine fluency in both math and verbal reasoning, lets him teach students to quickly ident...
Rice University
Bachelor in Arts, Music

Certified Tutor
Matt's mechanical engineering degree required constant work with multi-variable datasets — interpreting stress-strain graphs, cross-referencing specification tables, and drawing conclusions from competing data sources — which maps directly onto what GMAT Integrated Reasoning actually tests. He pairs...
University
Bachelor's

Certified Tutor
13+ years
Joyce
A finance and operations major at Penn with a 1590 SAT, Joyce brings the same quantitative and verbal cross-reading that IR demands — parsing tables alongside written passages and drawing conclusions fast. She teaches students to attack two-part analysis questions by working backward from the answer...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Science, Finance, Operations

Certified Tutor
James
Twenty years of teaching GMAT prep — including stints with several national test-prep companies — gave James a deep familiarity with the IR section's quirks, particularly the two-part analysis questions where students most often second-guess themselves. His art history research involves cross-refere...
Yale University
Master of Arts, History of Art
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Frequently Asked Questions
The Integrated Reasoning section tests your ability to synthesize information from multiple sources and solve complex problems—skills that business schools believe predict MBA success. The section includes four question types: Graphics Interpretation, Two-Part Analysis, Table Analysis, and Multi-Source Reasoning. Unlike the Quantitative and Verbal sections that test isolated skills, IR requires you to combine analytical, data interpretation, and reasoning abilities in realistic business scenarios.
You have 30 minutes total for 12 questions, which averages about 2.5 minutes per question—but that's tight. Most test-takers find Multi-Source Reasoning and Table Analysis questions consume more time since they require reading multiple sources or analyzing complex data sets. A strategic approach is to start with question types you're strongest in, build confidence and time cushion, then tackle harder formats. Tutors help you develop pacing strategies specific to your strengths and weaknesses rather than aiming for uniform timing across all question types.
The biggest mistakes are: (1) spending too long analyzing data before reading the question, (2) misinterpreting what the graphics actually show—percentages vs. absolute numbers, for example, (3) missing hidden assumptions in Two-Part Analysis questions, and (4) not reading answer choices carefully before submitting. Many students also underestimate how much reading is involved; IR has roughly 30% more text than the Verbal section, so strong reading comprehension directly impacts IR performance. Identifying which mistakes are holding you back—through practice tests and error analysis—is where personalized instruction makes the biggest difference.
Score improvement on IR varies more than other GMAT sections because many test-takers have limited exposure to these question types before studying. With focused practice and strategic tutoring, students typically see 3-5 point improvements (on the 1-8 scale) over 4-8 weeks, though larger gains are possible if you're starting from a lower baseline. The key is practicing under timed conditions with real GMAT questions, analyzing errors systematically, and addressing the specific question type that's holding you back. Personalized tutoring accelerates improvement because tutors identify whether your struggles stem from time management, conceptual gaps, or test anxiety—then target that root cause.
Effective IR practice has three phases: (1) learn each question type in isolation with untimed practice to build familiarity, (2) move to timed practice within the section, and (3) take full practice tests to experience the fatigue and pacing pressure of all four GMAT sections together. Many students skip phase one and jump straight to timed practice, which creates frustration and inflates error rates. Quality matters more than quantity—analyzing why you missed 5 questions tells you far more than rushing through 50. Tutors help you structure practice sessions strategically, identify patterns in your mistakes, and adjust your approach based on what the data reveals about your performance.
For students in Los Angeles preparing for the GMAT, personalized tutoring addresses IR challenges that group classes often miss. Tutors work with you to diagnose whether your problem is conceptual (not understanding how to interpret graphs), strategic (poor time allocation), or psychological (rushing through questions due to anxiety). They provide customized drills targeting your weakest question types, teach you to recognize question patterns quickly, and help you develop a personal pacing strategy based on your actual strengths. Since IR is unique compared to other standardized tests, many students benefit from expert guidance that breaks down each question type's underlying logic.
The short answer: less, but not insignificant. Business schools primarily focus on your Quantitative and Verbal scores, which together create your composite GMAT score (200-800). IR is scored separately on a 1-8 scale and is considered an additional data point showing analytical thinking—but a strong Quant/Verbal score with a weaker IR won't disqualify you from top programs. That said, if you're aiming for a competitive school, demonstrating competence across all sections signals well-rounded analytical ability. Rather than viewing IR as optional, think of it as an opportunity to show you can tackle complex, multi-step problems under pressure—exactly what MBA coursework requires.
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