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The GRE at a Glance

Test Overview

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The GRE* is created and administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS). The GRE General Test is designed to provide graduate schools with common measures for comparing the qualifications of applicants. The exam measures verbal, quantitative, and analytical reasoning skills that have been developed over a long period of time. ETS data shows that General Test scores consistently predict graduate school students' grades and performance.

Your GRE score is more than a formality in the admissions process. No matter where you apply, your GRE score can have great impact on the strength of your application. Roughly 500,000 people take the GRE each year (150,000 international test takers and 300,000 U.S. test takers). In fact, a high score can benefit you in several ways:

1. Most importantly, a high score will increase your likelihood of getting into the graduate program of your choice.

2. In addition to using the GRE as an admission criterion, schools often use GRE scores to determine eligibility for merit-based grants and fellowships as well as teaching and research assistantships.

3. Many programs establish cutoff points for GRE scores to limit the application pool, while others use GRE scores to directly determine how much financial support you receive. Investing your time and effort in preparing for the GRE today can get you into grad school and save you schooling expenses in the future.

Test Sections

Here is a summary of the three scored sections on the GRE: Verbal, quantitative, and analytical.

Verbal

-One 30-minute section with 30 questions
-Question types include analogies, sentence completion, antonyms, and reading comprehension
-Tests your vocabulary, verbal reasoning skills, and ability to read with understanding and insight

Quantitative

-One 45-minute section with 28 questions
-Question types include problem solving, quantitative comparison, and graph problems
-Designed to measure basic mathematical skills, assess understanding of mathematical concepts, and the ability to reason quantitatively

Analytical

-One 60-minute section with 35 questions
-Question types include logical reasoning and logic games
-Tests your ability to understand and analyze arguments and to understand and draw logical conclusions

The Experimental Section
In addition to the three scored sections, there may be one experimental section that looks like one of the scored sections, but does not count toward your score. ETS uses the experimental section to pre-test questions that will show up on the scored sections of future GREs. The experimental section looks just like one of the scored sections, so you won't be able to tell which one it is. (If you try to guess, there's a good chance that you'll guess wrong, which can be very hazardous to your test score.) The main thing for you to know about the experimental section is that it is unscored.

Sometimes there's a fifth section called Research, which does not count toward your score either. The research section is optional, so there's no reason for you to complete it. Also, there is a one-minute break between sections, and a 10-minute break towards the middle of the test.

Writing Assessment
ETS introduced the Writing Assessment test in October of 1999. The goal of the Writing Assessment is to demonstrate your ability to write analytically. It tests the kind of high-level thinking and writing skills that are generally viewed as essential for success in most graduate school programs.

The Writing Assessment consists of two analytical writing tasks:

A 45-minute "Present Your Perspective on an Issue" task. The issue task states an opinion on an topic of broad interest and asks test takers to address the issue from any perspective.
A 30-minute "Analyze an Argument" task. The argument task requires test takers to critique an argument by discussing how well-reasoned they find it.

The Writing Assessment is offered as a separate and optional test, which can be taken at ETS computer-based testing centers.

In recent years, graduate programs at different universities have been deciding whether to require their applicants to take the Writing Assessment as part of their application process. Check with the graduate schools to which you are applying to find out if you need to take this section.

Registering for the Test

The GRE is created and administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS). To register and schedule your GRE, get a copy of the GRE Registration Bulletin which contains information on GRE scheduling, pricing, repeat testing, cancellation policies, and more. You can order a GRE Registration Bulletin from ETS by calling (609) 771-7670. Or, download or order the GRE Registration Bulletin online at www.gre.org, available in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. To register and schedule your exam without the GRE Bulletin, call (800) GRE-CALL (473-2255) in the United States and Canada.

The exam is offered during the first three weeks of every month (CAT dates are subject to change without notice so be sure to verify precise dates during registration), and can be taken once per calendar month. You can schedule your GRE just a few days ahead. (But for an assured date and location, register early.) You can pay over the phone with a credit card or by check or money order using the CBT Authorization Voucher Request Form found in the GRE Registration Bulletin.

International Registration
For all locations except the United States and its territories, American Samoa, U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and Canada, use the International Test Scheduling Form, to register by mail.

Your Score

For each of the three sections (verbal, quantitative, and analytical) you'll get a "scaled score" within a range of 200-800. You can't score higher than an 800 in any one section. Similarly, you can't score lower than 200 either.

Percentile Rank
In addition to scaled scores, you'll also get a percentile rank which places your performance relative to those of a large sample population of other GRE test takers. Your percentile score tells graduate schools, in effect, what your scaled scores are worth. If everyone always received high scaled scores, universities would still be able to differentiate candidates by their percentile score.

What score do you need?
For some schools, they don't even consider applicants if their scores are below a certain level. (Large state university programs are generally more likely to do this.) You owe it to yourself to find out what kind of GRE scores impress the schools you're interested in, and then to work hard until you achieve the necessary scores. The score you'll "need" also depends on what you're hoping to study at a graduate level. A 600 quantitative score might be fine if you're planning to study history, for example, but it might not be distinctive if you're hoping to study a science or engineering.

Some things to keep in mind regarding GRE scoring:

You will get a score no matter how many questions you answer, but there is a penalty for unanswered questions.
At the end of the exam you will be asked if you want to see and keep your score.
If you answer "yes" you are given your score, and it is entered into your ETS score report.
If you answer "no" you are not given your score, and no score is entered into your ETS record. (The fact that you took the test on that date and canceled your score will be listed in your ETS score report.)
Requested score reports will be sent to schools within 10-15 days after the exam.
All GRE testing administrations will be listed (and usable) in your ETS report for five years.
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