When you sign up to take a GRE, ETS will mail you a Practice Book for the test that you signed up for. For example, when I signed up for the General GRE, I received a General GRE Practice test. Because I recently signed up to take the Psychology GRE, they sent me a Psychology Test Practice Book.
This 60-page or so practice test has made me love ETS a little bit more than I previously did. And that's not really based off the score that I ended up taking. It's the fact that it was a real GRE, one that they have retired but still contains the same type of questions. It has begun to get me interested in studying more thoroughly for the Psychology GRE already, which is a nice change from that Barron's test I took and blogged about in a previous post.
If I haven't mentioned this before, I'll mention it now: ETS has sole publishing rights to GREs and GRE questions, so other test preparation companies such as Barron's, Kaplan, and Princeton Review can only make up their own questions that are similar to ETS questions. So, I encourage people to buy the ETS materials to begin their preparation so that they can really see what a GRE is like.
One downside to taking a paper practice test is that it isn't what I'm going to be taking. In other words, I'm going to be taking a Computer Adaptive Test (CAT), which is different enough to matter.
What I liked about the practice test is that it told me what I would have gotten on it had it actually have counted in real life, something which the Barron's test didn't offer.
On the test, Form GR0781, which had copyright for 2007 and 2003 and 205 multiple-choice questions, I received these scores:
Total Score: 115
Scaled Score: 610
Subscores: 1.) 59 and 2.) 61
This is the note that I wrote right after I finished the test so that I wouldn't forget how the practice test went: "It took me 2 hours, including a phone interruption, hunger, not being fully awake, and eating breakfast. Took the test on the floor."
I was allotted 170 minutes to take it, which is 2 hours and 50 minutes. I finished with plenty of time. If I slowed down a little bit I might have done a little better, but I felt as though I was working at a comfortable pace. Another thing was that I started it right when I woke up, and let me tell you: I am not a morning person. Don't worry - I signed up to take the test in the afternoon!
So I'm starting off with a 610. I'd say that's a pretty solid number to start off. It's an average score. People actually get into doctoral programs with that score. In consideration that there were a lot of things on the test that I recognized but I just couldn't completely recall it then, I think with a little more time, studying, and practice I will be just fine. I'm aiming for a 720.
I can do this.
I never knew that, glad I read this blog entry. And good luck on increasing your score. And be sure you have a meal before the actual exam, you don't want your stomach interrupting you and the others concentration.
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