GMAT® Scores Sent to U.S. Schools by Non-U.S. Citizens (TY 2000 to TY 2007)
Factors affecting this trend:• Schools around the world are attracting and retaining more of their domestic pool• School and government requirements have changed• % of scores sent by W. Europeans decreased from 60% in TY 2000 to 40% in TY 2007• % of scores sent by Asian citizens decreased from 85% in TY 2000 to 80% in TY 2007• % of scores sent by C. Asian citizens decreased from 91% in TY 2000 to 67% in TY 2007. India received <1% of score reports in TY 2000—this increased to 11% in TY 2007.
Interesting fact:If U.S. schools had maintained TY 2000 score-reporting levels, they would have received 27,644 more score reports than they received in TY 2007. Examinees send an average of 3.0 score reports, which makes this difference equivalent to 9,215 more examinees.