Friday, February 29, 2008

CONTENTS OF GRE



Test Overivew: Content of the GRE
In all cases the Analytical Writing section is the first section of the test, followed by a 10 minute break. After the break, there are 3 sections, one of which is an experimental section, which is not scored. The experimental section is used by ETS to test new questions for use in future tests. When taking the test, you will have either 1 verbal and 2 math sections, or 2 verbal and 1 math section. You won’t be able to tell which section is the experimental section because it will look like the real section, so just be sure to do your best on all the parts of the test. Because now the ETS is testing its new test format which will be used starting November 2007, it is in certain cases possible to tell which section is experimental and which section is not. If you are allowed to use an on-screen calculator for the math section or there are no antonyms on the verbal section, then you are definitely taking an experimental section.
Analytical Writing
2 essays, 45 minutes and 30 minutesThe writing section of the GRE is meant to gauge analytical reasoning, organization, and analysis skills. The two essays include an issue essay and an argument essay. There are no right or wrong answers to the essay questions, and the essays will be read and scored by 2 (and possibly 3) readers. For more information about the essay section, and for writing tips, go to the essay tutorial section.
Break
10 minutes
Verbal
30 questions, 30 minutesIncludes 5-7 sentence completion questions, 8-10 antonym questions, 6-8 analogy questions, and 6-10 reading comprehension questions based on 2-4 reading passages. For more information on each of these question types, please see that tutorial chapter.
Math
28 questions, 45 minutesApproximately 10 of the questions are problem solving questions (the standard word problem, multiple choice questions), 14 are quantitative comparison questions, and 4 are data interpretation questions. For more information about the quantitative reasoning questions, please proceed to the appropriate tutorial.
Experimental Section*
You will have a fourth, experimental section that will either be a math or a verbal section. You will know if you were given a math or verbal experimental section because you will have two of those sections during the test, but you won’t know which of two identical sections will be experimental. The experimental section does not count toward your score and can be the 1st, 2nd, or 3rd section after the break. The experimental section is used by ETS to test new questions.*In the above example, the experimental section is the last section, but the order of the sections can be any of several combinations. For example, your test may be math-math-verbal, or verbal-math-verbal, or verbal-verbal-math, etc.

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