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GRE Test Preparation. Lesson 2 General Test Taking Strategies. General Test Taking Strategies. Establish a study schedule and consistently adhere to it. . Plan on studying at least 1-2 hours per day .
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GRE Test Preparation Lesson 2 General Test Taking Strategies
General Test Taking Strategies • Establish a study schedule and consistently adhere to it.. • Plan on studying at least 1-2 hours per day. • The more time you devote to studying, the more confident and prepared you’ll be on exam day. • Be very deliberate in structuring your study plan and stick with it. • Make sure you’re well-focused when you study. • Strive to get the most out of your study sessions. • Consider partnering with someone else who’s taking theexam.
General Test Taking Strategies • Take a full length verbal and analytical writing test at least once a week on your own at home. • Try to simulate real test conditions as much as possible. • Always “debrief” yourself and reflect carefully on your performance after every practice test. • Record and keep close track of all of your scores on practice tests. • Thoroughly review the answers you missed and read the answer explanations for the questions you answered incorrectly. • Maintain a learning journal to help you improve. • Write out a narrative explaining where and why you’re having difficulties with aspects of these sections of the test. • Write out a narrative offering your plans for strengthening and improving your performance. • Research from the journal Science reveals students learn more if they study something and then write out what they’ve learned in an essay or narrative format.
General Test Taking Strategies • Get to know the test thoroughly before you take it. • Memorize test instructions so you don’t waste time reading through them on test day. • Get comfortable with either the pencil-and-paper method or the CBT method depending on which one you’ll be doing for real. • Learn and internalize everything you need to know about taking the test well before you do it for real. • Do NOT procrastinate! This is a recipe for disaster. • Work to get your timing consistent and perfected as you complete any practice test.
General Test Taking Strategies • Some basic information regarding the GRE test. • Obviously this test is an important component to getting into graduate programs. • The test is designed to assess certain skills connected to success in a graduate program. • The test is NOT designed to test prior knowledge or cultural literacy or any data/facts specific to any academic discipline. • Verbal Ability and Analytical Writing are the sections of the test we’re concerned with • The verbal section is adaptive, which means for CBT, the software selects questions based on prior performance on earlier questions • The analytical writing section is NOT adaptive.
General Test Taking Strategies • Computer Based Testing • Advantage of immediate results and feedback. • Advantage of being able to take the test more frequently and registering for the test closer to the date of the test. • Advantage of fewer test questions. • Disadvantage of not being able to skip around to answer questions as you must answer them in the order they’re presented. • Disadvantage for those uncomfortable with computers.
General Test Taking Strategies • Computer Based Testing Tips • Use your time wisely. • Check your progress occasionally, but don’t get distracted or anxious. • Don’t spend too much time on any one question. • Your default is eliminating wrong answer choices and making an educated guess if necessary. • Answer every question in each section. • Guessing is better than leaving a question unanswered.
General Test Taking Strategies • Computer Based Testing Tips • Make effective use of break periods. • Use the relaxation/meditation techniques we’ve discussed and practiced. • Pay close attention to the first questions of each section. • These questions are more important than later questions because they are crucial to fine-tuning your other questions based on the adaptability of the test.. • Use the “Answer Confirm” button carefully. • Avoid errors by making sure you’ve clicked on the appropriate answer choice before confirming.
General Test Taking Strategies • Verbal Ability Section • Measures your ability to problem solve based on your language usage abilities. • Antonyms emphasize your ability to transition from a word and its meaning to its opposite. • Analogies test your ability to recognize comparable relationships between two different word pairs. • Sentence completion measures how well you can determine which words best complete a sentence in terms of style and logic.
General Test Taking Strategies • Verbal Ability Section • Reading comprehension tests your ability to analyze a written passage so be prepared to learn the following things: • Main idea, controlling idea or thesis statement. • Explicitly stated information. • Author’s implied ideas. • Applications of the author’s ideas to outside scenarios. • Author’s reasoning and persuasive techniques. • Author’s tone (attitude toward the subject). • Four passages on the general test—two are longer with 7-8 questions; two are shorter with 3-4 questions. • Topics are taken from the social sciences, the humanities, and physical and biological studies.
General Test Taking Strategies • Scoring of Verbal Ability Section • Raw scores are converted to scaled scores for full-length practice tests. • We’ll focus on raw scores for our practice tests, so scores from 60-76 for both verbal sections (30-37 per each verbal section) represent the top range of performance. • Always write down and keep track of your performance on your practice test score worksheet and maintain your learning journal to monitor your progress.
General Test Taking Strategies • Analytical Writing Section • Tests your ability to construct and analyze arguments. • One essay question asks you to address an issue from your perspective. • Your job is to use reason and logic to make a compelling argument for your position on the topic. • The other essay question wants you to evaluate and assess the strength of someone else’s argument. • Your job is to examine the quality and soundness of the argument based on the claims and supporting evidence, not agree or disagree with the position.
General Test Taking Strategies • Scoring of the Analytical Writing Section • 6-point scale (6 outstanding; 0 Illegible) scored by two trained readers. • Emphasis is on critical thinking and analytical writing rather than grammar and mechanics.
General Test Taking Strategies • General advice for the test. • Get a good night’s sleep the night before the test. • Wake up early (after at least seven hours of good sleep) and engage in a short relaxation/meditation session. • Enjoy a healthy breakfast that’s not too “heavy.” • Dress comfortably. • Arrive early to the test center. • Make sure you have everything you need, especially your • Use the restroom before you begin the test.