2023 2024 EduVark > Education Discussion > General Discussion


  #1  
February 4th, 2017, 11:07 AM
Unregistered
Guest User
 
MCQs MBA Entry Test

Can you tell me if the CAT (Common Admission Test) question paper for admission in MBA (Master in Business Administration) course has MCQs (Multiple Choice Questions)?
Similar Threads
Thread
Sample Entry Test Of Punjab University
Data Entry Skill Test In SSC CGL
Data Entry Test for Tax Assistant
Eligibility For DRDO Entry Test
UCP Entry Test Results Mba
University Of Gujrat Entry Test
DRDO Scientist Entry Test
DRDO Data Entry Test
DRDO Entry Test
Scientist Entry Test DRDO
DCET Entry Test Results
DRDO CEPTAM Entry Test Syllabus
Lateral Entry Entrance Test Syllabus
DRDO Entry Test Syllabus
DRDO Scientist entry test dates

  #2  
February 4th, 2017, 01:27 PM
Super Moderator
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Re: MCQs MBA Entry Test

Yes, CAT (Common Admission Test) question paper for admission in MBA (Master in Business Administration) course has MCQs (Multiple Choice Questions). Below I am providing a sample paper for it:

1. According to the passage, all of the following stem from popular wisdom on language Except?
(1) Language is a cultural artifact.
(2) Language is a cultural invention.
(3) Language is learnt as we grow.
(4) Language is a psychological faculty.

2. Which of the following can be used as parallel reasoning for the “spiders know how to spin webs” analogy as used by the author?
(1) A kitten learning to jump over a wall
(2) Bees collecting nectar
(3) A donkey carrying a load
(4) A horse running a Derby

3. According to the passage, which of the following is unique to human beings?
(1) Ability to use symbols while communicating with one another.
(2) Ability to communicate with each other through voice modulation.
(3) Ability to communicate information to other members of the species.
(4) Ability to use sound as means of communication.

4. According to the passage, complexity of language cannot be taught by parents or at school to children because
(1) children instinctively know language.
(2) children learn the language on their own.
(3) language is not amenable to teaching.
(4) children know language better than their teachers or parents.

5. Which of the following best summarizes the passage?
(1) Language is unique to Homo sapiens.
(2) Language is neither learnt nor taught.
(3) Language is not a cultural invention or artifact as it is made out.
(4) Language is instinctive ability of human beings

6. Why author has referred to ‘preschooler’s tacit knowledge of grammar’
(1) To prove that Language is unique to Homo sapiens.
(2) Used as an analogy for healthy human beings
(3) To prove his point that language is not a cultural invention or artifact as it is made out.
(4) To compare children instinctively know language.

If American policy towards Europe in the postwar years had been a conspicuous success, and
towards Asia a disappointing balance between success and failure, it could be said that the most
conspicuous thing about relations with Latin America was the absence of any policy. Franklin
Roosevelt, to be sure, had launched a “Good Neighbour” policy, but being a good neighbour was, it
seemed, a negative rather than a positive affair, a matter of keeping hands off, of making the
Monroe Doctrine, in form at least, multilateral. All through the postwar years, the states of Latin
America - - Mexico and Chile were partial exceptions - - were in the throes of major economic and
social crises. Population was growing faster than in any other part of the globe, without a
comparable increase in wealth or productivity; the gap between the poor and the rich was widening;
and as the rich and powerful turned to the military for the preservation of order and privilege, the
poor turned to revolution.


Deeply involved in other quarters of the globe, the United States paid little attention to the fortunes
or misfortunes of her neighbours to the south, and when she did intervene, it appeared to be on the
side of order and the status quo rather than on the side of reform. So frightened was the United
States of “Communism” in Latin America that it preferred military dictatorship to reformers who
might drift too far to the “left”, and sustained a Batista in Cuba, a Trujillo in the Dominican Republic,
a Peron in Argentina, and a Jimenez in Venezuela.
In his last two years, President Eisenhower had tried to mend his Latin American fences. Though
rejecting a Brazilian proposal of a Marshall Plan for Latin America, he did take the initiative in setting
up an Inter-American development Bank with a capital of one billion dollars, almost half of it
supplied by the United States. Other government investments in Latin America ran to some four
million dollars, while private investments exceeded nine billion. Yet though to most Americans, all
this seemed a form of economic aid, many Latin Americans regarded it as economic imperialism. In
September 1960, came a co-operative plan that could not be regarded as other than enlightened:
the Act of Bogota, which authorized a grant of half a billion dollars to subsidize not only economic
but social and educational progress in Latin America. “We are not saints”, said President Eisenhower
when he visited Santiago de Chile, “We know we make mistakes, but our heart is in the right place”.
But was it? President Kennedy was confronted by the same dilemma that had perplexed his
predecessors. Clearly it was essential to provide a large-scale aid to the countries south of Rio
Grande, but should this aid go to bolster up established regimes and thus help maintain status quo,
or should it be used to speed up social reforms, even at the risk of revolt? As early as 1958, the then
Senator Kennedy had asserted that “the objective of our aid program in Latin America should not be
to purchase allies, but to consolidate a free and democratic Western Hemisphere, alleviating those
conditions which might foster opportunities for communistic infiltration and uniting our peoples on
the basis of constantly increasing living standards”.
This conviction that raising the standards of living was the best method of checking Communism
now inspired President Kennedy's bold proposal for the creation of the alliance for progress - - a ten
year plan designed to do for Latin America what Marshall Plan had done for Western Europe. It was
to be “a peaceful revolution on a hemispheric scale, a vast cooperative effort, unparalleled in
magnitude and nobility of purpose, to satisfy the basic needs of the American people for homes,
work, land, health and schools. “To achieve this, the United States pleaded an initial grant of one
billion dollars, with the promise of additional billions for the future.
7. Following World War II, which problem was the United States most concerned with regarding
Latin America?
(a) Economic stability.
(b) Political ideology.
(c) Religious persecution.
(d) Military dictatorship.
8. A key reason why Latin American rejected the Inter-American development Bank was that
(a) it primarily provided money for social reform subsidies.
(b) the moneys provided were only for specific performance projects.
(c) it constituted an extension of the Marshall Plan into Latin America
(d) it was being used as a means to control the economic destiny of Latin America.
9. Which of the following is most closely associated with the concept of a Marshall Plan for Latin
America?


(a) The Good Neighbour Policy.
(b) The Alliance for Progress.
(c) The Act of Bogota.
(d) The Monroe Doctrine.
10. According to the passage, the fundamental change in U.S. foreign policy directed towards Latin
America
(a) resulted in a deterioration of U.S. Latin American relations.
(b) was responsible for Peron remaining as a dictator in Peru.
(c) recognized that economic aid alone would prevent social revolutions.
(d) provided for increased military and economic aid to prevent the spread of communism in Latin
America.
11. All of the following statements are true, except?
(a) Mexico and Chile did not experience the general social crises that are common to the majority of
Latin American countries.
(b) President Eisenhower continued in practice the theory that economic aid was the best defense
against communist incursion into Latin America
(c) The Good Neighbour Policy favoured a multilateral interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine.
(d) The traditional U.S. approach in Latin America was to protect the status quo.
12. Which of the inferences can be drawn if everything said in the passage were assumed to be true?
(a) Rebellions are fuelled by social reforms and avoided by supporting established authorities or
continuing the present state of affairs.
(b) The American policy towards Asia can be called an overall success, though small in magnitude.
(c) Kennedy, in 1958, wanted America to aid South American countries to acquire more support in
their fight against communism.
(d) Eisenhower rejected the Marshall Plan, whereas Kennedy implemented a similar one.
Attached Files
File Type: pdf MBA - CAT Question Paper.pdf (1.34 MB, 68 views)


Quick Reply
Your Username: Click here to log in

Message:
Options



All times are GMT +5. The time now is 11:48 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8