The GMAT Enhanced Score Report (ESR) is an unofficial GMAT score. It is calculated using the same data supported in your unofficial score report.
The ESR is intended to provide further insight into your performance, strengths, and weaknesses to help you better prepare for future studies.
View Sample Enhanced Score Report
For more information about ESR scoring:
Why isn't my AWA score included in the ESR?
The data used to create the report comes from your unofficial scores. Since the AWA is not included in unofficial scores, it is not included in the ESR.
Why doesn't the IR section provide sub-section results?
Because the IR section has only 12 questions and several different question formats, there is not enough information at a smaller level that could provide more meaningful feedback than that of the full section results.
Why doesn't my Quantitative section score reflect the mean of the sub-scores?
Section scores are calculated based on three things: the number of correct questions, the difficulty of all questions, and the number of questions answered (i.e., the penalty for not finishing). Because each sub-section may differ based on each of these three factors, then the full section score will not be an equally weighted composite of the sub-sections.
Why doesn't my Verbal section score reflect the mean of the sub-scores?
Section scores are calculated based on three things: the number of correct questions, the difficulty of all questions, and the number of questions answered (i.e., the penalty for not finishing). Because each sub-section may differ based on each of these three factors, then the full section score will not be an equally weighted composite of the sub-sections.
What does the percentile ranking mean?
The number represents the percentage of people that performed below you (e.g., 100 people take an exam and three people get a perfect score, all three did better than 97 test takers. This places the three in the 97th percentile).