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Graduate Record Examinations

The Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) is a standardized test that is part of the admissions process for many graduate schools[7] in the United States and Canada[8] and a few other countries. The GRE is owned and administered by Educational Testing Service (ETS).[9] The test was established in 1936 by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.[10]

Record Examination: General Test
AcronymGRE
TypeComputer-based or paper-based standardized test
Developer / administratorEducational Testing Service
Knowledge / skills testedAnalytical writing, quantitative reasoning and verbal reasoning.
PurposeAdmissions to master's and doctoral degree programs in various universities
Year started1936; 88 years ago (1936)
DurationAbout 3 hours and 45 minutes (includes 1-minute breaks after each section and a 10-minute break after third section)
Score / grade rangeAnalytical writing: 0.0 to 6.0 (in 0.5-point increments),
Verbal reasoning: 130 to 170 (in 1-point increments),
Quantitative reasoning: 130 to 170 (in 1-point increments).
Score / grade validity5 years
OfferedComputer-based test: Multiple times a year (depends on availability of the test center)
Paper-based test: Up to 3 times a year in October, November and February[1]
Restrictions on attemptsComputer-based test: Can be taken only once after 21 days from the day of exam in every year. Maximum of 5 times a year. (Applies even if candidate cancels scores on a test taken previously.)[2]
Paper-based test: Can be taken as often as it is offered.[2]
Countries / regionsAbout 1,000 test centers in more than 160 countries[3]
LanguagesEnglish
Annual number of test takers 341,574 (T.Y. 2021-22)[4]
Prerequisites / eligibility criteriaNo official prerequisite. Intended for bachelor's degree graduates and undergraduate students who are about to graduate. Fluency in English assumed.
FeeUS$ 205[5]
(Limited offers of "Fee Reduction Program" for U.S. citizens or resident aliens who demonstrate financial need, and for national programs in United States that work with underrepresented groups.[6])
Scores / grades used byMost graduate schools in USA, and in a few other countries
Websitewww.ets.org/gre

According to ETS, the GRE aims to measure verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, analytical writing, and critical thinking skills that have been acquired over a long period of learning. The content of the GRE consists of certain specific data analysis or interpretation, arguments and reasoning, algebra, geometry, arithmetic, and vocabulary sections. The GRE General Test is offered as a computer-based exam administered at testing centers and institution owned or authorized by Prometric. In the graduate school admissions process, the level of emphasis that is placed upon GRE scores varies widely among schools and departments. The importance of a GRE score can range from being a mere admission formality to an important selection factor.

The GRE was significantly overhauled in August 2011, resulting in an exam that is adaptive on a section-by-section basis, rather than question by question, so that the performance on the first verbal and math sections determines the difficulty of the second sections presented (excluding the experimental section). Overall, the test retained the sections and many of the question types from its predecessor, but the scoring scale was changed to a 130 to 170 scale (from a 200 to 800 scale).[11]

The cost to take the test is US$205,[5] although ETS will reduce the fee under certain circumstances.[6] It also provides financial aid to GRE applicants who prove economic hardship.[12] ETS does not release scores that are older than five years, although graduate program policies on the acceptance of scores older than five years will vary.

Once almost universally required for admission to Ph.D. science programs in the U.S., its use for that purpose has fallen precipitously.[13]

History edit

The Graduate Record Examinations was "initiated in 1936 as a joint experiment in higher education by the graduate school deans of four Ivy League universities and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching."[10]

The first universities to experiment with the test on their students were Harvard University, Yale University, Princeton University and Columbia University.[14] The University of Wisconsin was the first public university to ask their students to take the test in 1938.[15] It was first given to students at the University of Iowa in 1940, where it was analyzed by psychologist Dewey Stuit.[14] It was first taken by students at Texas Tech University in 1942.[16] In 1943, it was taken by students at Michigan State University, where it was analyzed by Paul Dressel.[17] It was taken by over 45,000 students applying to 500 colleges in 1948.[10]

"Until the Educational Testing Service was established in January, 1948, the Graduate Record Examination remained a project of the Carnegie Foundation."[10]

2011 revision edit

In 2006, ETS announced plans to make significant changes in the format of the GRE. Planned changes for the revised GRE included a longer testing time, a departure from computer-adaptive testing, a new grading scale, and an enhanced focus on reasoning skills and critical thinking for both the quantitative and qualitative sections.[18]

On April 2, 2007, ETS announced the decision to cancel plans for revising the GRE.[19] The announcement cited concerns over the ability to provide clear and equal access to the new test after the planned changes as an explanation for the cancellation. The ETS stated, however, that they did plan "to implement many of the planned test content improvements in the future", although specific details regarding those changes were not initially announced.

Changes to the GRE took effect on November 1, 2007, as ETS started to include new types of questions in the exam. The changes mostly centered on "fill in the blank" type answers for the mathematics section that requires the test-taker to fill in the blank directly, without being able to choose from a multiple choice list of answers. ETS announced plans to introduce two of these new types of questions in each quantitative section, while the majority of questions would be presented in the regular format.[20]

Since January 2008, the Reading Comprehension within the verbal sections has been reformatted, passages' "line numbers will be replaced with highlighting when necessary in order to focus the test taker on specific information in the passage" to "help students more easily find the pertinent information in reading passages."[21]

In December 2009, ETS announced plans to move forward with significant revisions to the GRE in 2011.[22] Changes include a new 130–170 scoring scale, the elimination of certain question types such as antonyms and analogies, the addition of an online calculator, and the elimination of the CAT format of question-by-question adjustment, in favor of a section by section adjustment.[23]

On August 1, 2011, the Revised GRE General test replaced General GRE test. The revised GRE is said to be better by design and provides a better test taking experience. The new types of questions in the revised format are intended to test the skills needed in graduate and business schools programs.[24] From July 2012 onwards GRE announced an option for users to customize their scores called ScoreSelect.[25]

Before October 2002 edit

The earliest versions of the GRE tested only for verbal and quantitative ability. For a number of years before October 2002, the GRE had a separate Analytical Ability section which tested candidates on logical and analytical reasoning abilities. This section was replaced by the Analytical Writing Assessment.[26][27]

Structure edit

The computer-based GRE General Test consists of six sections. The first section is always the analytical writing section involving separately timed issue and argument tasks. The next five sections consist of two verbal reasoning sections, two quantitative reasoning sections, and either an experimental or research section. These five sections may occur in any order. The experimental section does not count towards the final score but is not distinguished from the scored sections. Unlike the computer adaptive test before August 2011, the GRE General Test is a multistage test, where the examinee's performance on earlier sections determines the difficulty of subsequent sections, using a technique known as computer-adaptive testing. This format allows the examined person to freely move back and forth between questions within each section, and the testing software allows the user to "mark" questions within each section for later review if time remains. The entire testing procedure lasts about 3 hours 45 minutes.[28][29] One-minute breaks are offered after each section and a 10-minute break after the third section.

The paper-based GRE General Test also consists of six sections. The analytical writing is split up into two sections, one section for each issue and argument task. The next four sections consist of two verbal and two quantitative sections in varying order. There is no experimental section on the paper-based test.

Verbal section edit

The computer-based verbal sections assess reading comprehension, critical reasoning, and vocabulary usage. The verbal test is scored on a scale of 130–170, in 1-point increments. (Before August 2011, the scale was 200–800, in 10-point increments.) In a typical examination, each verbal section consists of 20 questions to be completed in 30 minutes.[28] Each verbal section consists of about 6 text completion, 4 sentence equivalence, and 10 critical reading questions. The changes in 2011 include a reduced emphasis on rote vocabulary knowledge and the elimination of antonyms and analogies. Text completion items have replaced sentence completions and new reading question types allowing for the selection of multiple answers were added.

Quantitative section edit

The computer-based quantitative sections assess basic high school level mathematical knowledge and reasoning skills. The quantitative test is scored on a scale of 130–170, in 1-point increments (Before August 2011 the scale was 200–800, in 10-point increments). In a typical examination, each quantitative section consists of 20 questions to be completed in 35 minutes.[28] Each quantitative section consists of about 8 quantitative comparisons, 9 problem solving items, and 3 data interpretation questions. The changes in 2011 include the addition of numeric entry items requiring the examinee to fill in the blank and multiple-choice items requiring the examinee to select multiple correct responses.[30]

Analytical writing section edit

The analytical writing section consists of two different essays, an "issue task" and an "argument task". The writing section is graded on a scale of 0–6, in half-point increments. The essays are written on a computer using a word processing program specifically designed by ETS. The program allows only basic computer functions and does not contain a spell-checker or other advanced features. Each essay is scored by at least two readers on a six-point holist scale. If the two scores are within one point, the average of the scores is taken. If the two scores differ by more than a point, a third reader examines the response.

Issue Task edit

The test taker is given 30 minutes to write an essay about a selected topic.[31] Issue topics are selected from a pool of questions, which the GRE Program has published in its entirety. Individuals preparing for the GRE may access the pool of tasks on the ETS website.[32]

Argument Task edit

The test taker will be given an argument (i.e. a series of facts and considerations leading to a conclusion) and asked to write an essay that critiques the argument. Test takers are asked to consider the argument's logic and to make suggestions about how to improve the logic of the argument. Test takers are expected to address the logical flaws of the argument and not provide a personal opinion on the subject. The time allotted for this essay is 30 minutes.[28] The Arguments are selected from a pool of topics, which the GRE Program has published in its entirety. Individuals preparing for the GRE may access the pool of tasks on the ETS website.[33]

Experimental section edit

The experimental section, which can be either verbal or quantitative, contains new questions ETS is considering for future use. Although the experimental section does not count towards the test-taker's score, it is unidentified and appears identical to the scored sections. Because test takers have no definite way of knowing which section is experimental, it is typically advised that test takers try their best and be focused on every section. Sometimes an identified research section at the end of the test is given instead of the experimental section.[34] There is no experimental section on the paper-based GRE.[35]

Scoring edit

An examinee can miss one or more questions on a multiple-choice section and still receive a perfect score of 170. Likewise, even if no question is answered correctly, 130 is the lowest possible score.[11] Verbal and qualitative reasoning scores are given in one-point increments, and analytical writing scores are given in half-point increments on a scale of 0 to 6.[36][37]

Scaled score percentiles edit

The percentiles for the current General test and the concordance with the prior format[38] are as follows. According to interpretive data published by ETS, from July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2018 about 2 million people have taken the test. Based on performance of individuals the mean and standard deviation of verbal section were 150.24 and 8.44. Whereas, mean and standard deviation for quantitative section were 153.07 and 9.24. Analytical writing has a mean of 3.55 with a standard deviation of 0.86.[39]

Scaled score Verbal reasoning percentile Verbal prior scale Quantitative reasoning percentile Quantitative prior scale
170 99 760–800 96 800
169 99 740–750 94 800
168 98 720–730 92 800
167 98 710 89 800
166 97 700 87 800
165 96 680–690 85 790
164 94 660–670 83 790
163 92 650 80 780
162 90 630–640 78 770
161 88 620 75 770
160 85 600–610 72 760
159 82 590 69 750
158 79 570–580 65 740
157 75 560 62 730
156 72 540–550 59 720
155 67 530 55 700–710
154 63 510–520 51 690
153 59 500 48 680
152 53 480–490 44 660–670
151 50 460–470 40 640–650
150 45 450 36 630
149 40 430–440 33 610–620
148 36 420 29 590–600
147 32 410 25 570–580
146 28 390–400 22 550–560
145 25 380 18 530–540
144 22 370 15 500–520
143 19 350–360 13 480–490
142 16 340 11 460–470
141 14 330 9 430–450
140 11 320 7 400–420
139 9 310 6 380–390
138 8 300 4 350–370
137 6 290 3 330–340
136 5 280 3 300–320
135 4 280 2 280–290
134 3 270 1 260–270
133 2 260 1 240–250
132 2 250 <1 220–230
131 1 240 <1 200–210
130 <1 200–230 <1 200
 
Field-wise distribution of takers of GRE revised General Test.[40]
Analytical Writing score Writing % Below
6 99
5.5 98
5 92
4.5 81
4 57
3.5 39
3 15
2.5 7
2 2
1.5 1
1 <1
0.5 <1

"Field-wise distribution" of test takers is "limited to those who earned their college degrees up to two years before the test date." ETS provides no score data for "non-traditional" students who have been out of school more than two years, although its own report "RR-99-16" indicated that 22% of all test takers in 1996 were over the age of 30.

GRE Subject Tests edit

In addition to the General Test, there are also three GRE Subject Tests testing knowledge in the specific areas of Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology. The length of each exam is 170 minutes.

In the past, subject tests were also offered in the areas of Computer Science, Economics, Revised Education, Engineering, English, Geology, History, Music, Political Science, Sociology, and Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology. In April 1998, the Revised Education and Political Science exams were discontinued. In April 2000, the History and Sociology exams were discontinued; with Economics, Engineering, Music, and Geology being discontinued in April 2001.[41] The Computer Science exam was discontinued after April 2013.[42] Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology was discontinued in December 2016. The GRE Biology Test and GRE Literature in English Test tests were discontinued in May 2021.[43] The GRE Chemistry Test was discontinued in May 2023.[44]

Use in admissions edit

Many graduate schools in the United States require GRE results as part of the admissions process. The GRE is a standardized test intended to measure all graduates' abilities in tasks of general academic nature (regardless of their fields of specialization) and the extent to which undergraduate education has developed their verbal skills, quantitative skills, and abstract thinking.

In addition to GRE scores, admission to graduate schools depends on several other factors, such as GPA, letters of recommendation, and statements of purpose.[45] Furthermore, unlike other standardized admissions tests (such as the SAT, LSAT, and MCAT), the use and weight of GRE scores vary considerably not only from school to school, but also from department to department and program to program.[46] For instance, most business schools and economics programs require very high GRE or GMAT scores for entry, while engineering programs are known to allow more score variation. Liberal arts programs may only consider the applicant's verbal score, while mathematics and science programs may only consider quantitative ability. Some schools use the GRE in admissions decisions, but not in funding decisions; others use it for selection of scholarship and fellowship candidates, but not for admissions. In some cases, the GRE may be a general requirement for graduate admissions imposed by the university, while particular departments may not consider the scores at all.[47] Graduate schools will typically provide the average scores of previously admitted students and information about how the GRE is considered in admissions and funding decisions. In some cases, programs have hard cut off requirements for the GRE; for example, the Yale Economics PhD program requires a minimum quantitative score of 160 to apply.[48] The best way to ascertain how a particular school or program evaluates a GRE score in the admissions process is to contact the person in charge of graduate admissions for the specific program in question.

In February 2016, the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law became the first law school to accept either the GRE or the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) from all applicants.[49][50][51] The college made the decision after conducting a study showing that the GRE is a valid and reliable predictor of students' first-term law school grades.

In the spring of 2017, Harvard Law School announced it was joining University of Arizona Law in accepting the GRE in addition to the LSAT from applicants to its three-year J.D. program.[52]

After a trial cycle of GRE–free admissions for Fall 2021, University of California, Berkeley voted to drop the GRE requirement for most graduate program admissions for Fall 2022 as well.[53] University of Michigan, Ann Arbor shortly followed announcing that they would drop the GRE requirements for Ph.D. admissions beginning with the 2022–23 admissions cycle.[54] By late 2022, the trend had intensified.[13]

MBA edit

GRE score can be used for taking admission in MBA in foreign colleges.

The GMAT (Graduate Management Admission Test) is a computer-adaptive standardized test in mathematics and the English language for measuring aptitude to succeed academically in graduate business studies. Business schools commonly use the test as one of many selection criteria for admission into an MBA program. Starting in 2009, many business schools began accepting the GRE in lieu of a GMAT score. Policies varied widely for several years. However, as of the 2014–2015 admissions season, most business schools accept both tests equally. Either a GMAT score or a GRE score can be submitted for an application to an MBA program. Business schools also accept either score for their other (non-MBA) Masters and Ph.D. programs.

The primary issue on which business school test acceptance policies vary is in how old a GRE or GMAT score can be before it is no longer accepted. The standard is that scores cannot be more than 5 years old (e.g., Wharton,[55] MIT Sloan,[56] Columbia Business School[57]).

Intellectual clubs edit

Some GRE scores (usually pre-2002 ones) are accepted as qualifying evidence to intellectual clubs such as Intertel,[58] Mensa[59] and the Triple Nine Society,[60] the minimum passing score depending on the selectivity of the society and the time period when the test was taken. Intertel accepts scores in the 99th percentile[how?] obtained after 2011, while Mensa and TNS do not accept any score post-September 2001.

Preparation edit

A variety of resources are available for those wishing to prepare for the GRE. ETS provides preparation software called PowerPrep, which contains two practice tests of retired questions, as well as further practice questions and review material. Since the software replicates both the test format and the questions used, it can be useful to predict the actual GRE scores. ETS does not license their past questions to any other company, making them the only source for official retired material. ETS used to publish the "BIG BOOK" which contained a number of actual GRE questions; however, this publishing was abandoned. Several companies provide courses, books, and other unofficial preparation materials.

Some students taking the GRE use a test preparation company. Students who do not use these courses often rely on material from university text books, GRE preparation books, sample tests, and free web resources.

Testing locations edit

While the general and subject tests are held at many undergraduate institutions, the computer-based general test can be held in over 1000 locations[61] with appropriate technological accommodations. In the United States, students in major cities or from large universities will usually find a nearby test center, while those in more isolated areas may have to travel a few hours to an urban or university location. Many industrialized countries also have test centers, but at times test-takers must cross country borders.

Criticism edit

Bias edit

Algorithmic bias edit

Critics have claimed that the computer-adaptive methodology may discourage some test takers since the question difficulty changes with performance.[62] For example, if the test-taker is presented with remarkably easy questions halfway into the exam, they may infer that they are not performing well, which will influence their abilities as the exam continues, even though question difficulty is subjective. By contrast, standard testing methods may discourage students by giving them more difficult items earlier on.

Critics have also stated that the computer-adaptive method of placing more weight on the first several questions is biased against test takers who typically perform poorly at the beginning of a test due to stress or confusion before becoming more comfortable as the exam continues.[63] On the other hand, standard fixed-form tests could equally be said to be "biased" against students with less testing stamina since they would need to be approximately twice the length of an equivalent computer adaptive test to obtain a similar level of precision.[64]

Implicit bias edit

The GRE has also been subjected to the same racial bias criticisms that have been lodged against other admissions tests. In 1998, The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education noted that the mean score for black test-takers in 1996 was 389 on the verbal section, 409 on the quantitative section, and 423 on the analytic, while white test-takers averaged 496, 538, and 564, respectively.[65] The National Association of Test Directors Symposia in 2004 stated a belief that simple mean score differences may not constitute evidence of bias unless the populations are known to be equal in ability.[66] A more effective, accepted, and empirical approach is the analysis of differential test functioning, which examines the differences in item response theory curves for subgroups; the best approach for this is the DFIT framework.[67]

Weak indicator of graduate school performance edit

The GREs are criticized for not being a true measure of whether a student will be successful in graduate school. Robert Sternberg (now of Cornell University;[68] working at Yale University at the time of the study), a long-time critic of modern intelligence testing in general, found the GRE general test was weakly predictive of success in graduate studies in psychology.[69] The strongest relationship was found for the now-defunct analytical portion of the exam.

The ETS published a report ("What is the Value of the GRE?") that points out the predictive value of the GRE on a student's index of success at the graduate level.[70] The problem with earlier studies is the statistical phenomenon of restriction of range. A correlation coefficient is sensitive to the range sampled for the test. Specifically, if only students accepted to graduate programs are studied (in Sternberg & Williams and other research), the relationship is occluded. Validity coefficients range from .30 to .45 between the GRE and both first year and overall graduate GPA in ETS' study.[71]

Kaplan and Saccuzzo state that the criterion that the GRE best predicts is first-year grades in graduate school. However, this correlation is only in the high tens to low twenties. "If the test correlates with a criterion at the .4 level, then it accounts for 16% of the variability in that criterion, with the other 84% resulting from unknown factors and errors"[72] (p. 303). Graduate schools may be placing too much importance on standardized tests rather than on factors that more fully account for graduate school success, such as a thesis-requiring Honours degree, prior research experience, GPAs, or work experience. While graduate schools do consider these areas, many times schools will not consider applicants that score below a current score of roughly 314 (1301 prior score). Kaplan and Saccuzzo also state that "the GRE predict[s] neither clinical skill nor even the ability to solve real-world problems" (p. 303).

In 2007, a study by a university found a correlation of .30 to .45 between the GRE and both first year and overall graduate GPA. The correlation between GRE score and graduate school completion rates ranged from .11 (for the now defunct analytical section) to .39 (for the GRE subject test). Correlations with faculty ratings ranged from .35 to .50.[71]

Historical susceptibility to cheating edit

In May 1994, Kaplan, Inc warned ETS, in hearings before a New York legislative committee, that the small question pool available to the computer-adaptive test made it vulnerable to cheating. ETS assured investigators that it was using multiple sets of questions and that the test was secure. This was later discovered to be incorrect.[73]

In December 1994, prompted by student reports of recycled questions, then Director of GRE Programs for Kaplan, Inc and current CEO of Knewton, Jose Ferreira, led a team of 22 staff members deployed to 9 U.S. cities to take the exam. Kaplan, Inc then presented ETS with 150 questions, representing 70–80% of the GRE.[74] According to early news releases, ETS appeared grateful to Stanley H. Kaplan, Inc. for identifying the security problem. However, on December 31, ETS sued Kaplan, Inc. for violation of a federal electronic communications privacy act, copyright laws, breach of contract, fraud, and a confidentiality agreement signed by test-takers on test day.[75] On January 2, 1995, an agreement was reached out of court.

Additionally, in 1994, the scoring algorithm for the computer-adaptive form of the GRE was discovered to be insecure. ETS acknowledged that Kaplan, Inc employees, led by Jose Ferreira, reverse-engineered key features of the GRE scoring algorithms. The researchers found that a test taker's performance on the first few questions of the exam had a disproportionate effect on the test taker's final score. To preserve the integrity of scores, ETS adopted a more sophisticated scoring algorithm.

See also edit

GRE Subject Tests:

Discontinued GRE Subject Tests:

Other tests:

References edit

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External links edit

graduate, record, examinations, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, standardized, test, that, part, admissions, process, many, graduate, schools, united, states, canada, other, countries, owned, administered, educational, testing, service, test, esta. GRE redirects here For other uses see GRE disambiguation The Graduate Record Examinations GRE is a standardized test that is part of the admissions process for many graduate schools 7 in the United States and Canada 8 and a few other countries The GRE is owned and administered by Educational Testing Service ETS 9 The test was established in 1936 by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 10 Record Examination General TestAcronymGRETypeComputer based or paper based standardized testDeveloper administratorEducational Testing ServiceKnowledge skills testedAnalytical writing quantitative reasoning and verbal reasoning PurposeAdmissions to master s and doctoral degree programs in various universitiesYear started1936 88 years ago 1936 DurationAbout 3 hours and 45 minutes includes 1 minute breaks after each section and a 10 minute break after third section Score grade rangeAnalytical writing 0 0 to 6 0 in 0 5 point increments Verbal reasoning 130 to 170 in 1 point increments Quantitative reasoning 130 to 170 in 1 point increments Score grade validity5 yearsOfferedComputer based test Multiple times a year depends on availability of the test center Paper based test Up to 3 times a year in October November and February 1 Restrictions on attemptsComputer based test Can be taken only once after 21 days from the day of exam in every year Maximum of 5 times a year Applies even if candidate cancels scores on a test taken previously 2 Paper based test Can be taken as often as it is offered 2 Countries regionsAbout 1 000 test centers in more than 160 countries 3 LanguagesEnglishAnnual number of test takers341 574 T Y 2021 22 4 Prerequisites eligibility criteriaNo official prerequisite Intended for bachelor s degree graduates and undergraduate students who are about to graduate Fluency in English assumed FeeUS 205 5 Limited offers of Fee Reduction Program for U S citizens or resident aliens who demonstrate financial need and for national programs in United States that work with underrepresented groups 6 Scores grades used byMost graduate schools in USA and in a few other countriesWebsitewww wbr ets wbr org wbr greAccording to ETS the GRE aims to measure verbal reasoning quantitative reasoning analytical writing and critical thinking skills that have been acquired over a long period of learning The content of the GRE consists of certain specific data analysis or interpretation arguments and reasoning algebra geometry arithmetic and vocabulary sections The GRE General Test is offered as a computer based exam administered at testing centers and institution owned or authorized by Prometric In the graduate school admissions process the level of emphasis that is placed upon GRE scores varies widely among schools and departments The importance of a GRE score can range from being a mere admission formality to an important selection factor The GRE was significantly overhauled in August 2011 resulting in an exam that is adaptive on a section by section basis rather than question by question so that the performance on the first verbal and math sections determines the difficulty of the second sections presented excluding the experimental section Overall the test retained the sections and many of the question types from its predecessor but the scoring scale was changed to a 130 to 170 scale from a 200 to 800 scale 11 The cost to take the test is US 205 5 although ETS will reduce the fee under certain circumstances 6 It also provides financial aid to GRE applicants who prove economic hardship 12 ETS does not release scores that are older than five years although graduate program policies on the acceptance of scores older than five years will vary Once almost universally required for admission to Ph D science programs in the U S its use for that purpose has fallen precipitously 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 2011 revision 1 2 Before October 2002 2 Structure 2 1 Verbal section 2 2 Quantitative section 2 3 Analytical writing section 2 3 1 Issue Task 2 3 2 Argument Task 2 4 Experimental section 3 Scoring 3 1 Scaled score percentiles 4 GRE Subject Tests 5 Use in admissions 5 1 MBA 5 2 Intellectual clubs 6 Preparation 7 Testing locations 8 Criticism 8 1 Bias 8 1 1 Algorithmic bias 8 1 2 Implicit bias 8 2 Weak indicator of graduate school performance 8 3 Historical susceptibility to cheating 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2018 The Graduate Record Examinations was initiated in 1936 as a joint experiment in higher education by the graduate school deans of four Ivy League universities and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 10 The first universities to experiment with the test on their students were Harvard University Yale University Princeton University and Columbia University 14 The University of Wisconsin was the first public university to ask their students to take the test in 1938 15 It was first given to students at the University of Iowa in 1940 where it was analyzed by psychologist Dewey Stuit 14 It was first taken by students at Texas Tech University in 1942 16 In 1943 it was taken by students at Michigan State University where it was analyzed by Paul Dressel 17 It was taken by over 45 000 students applying to 500 colleges in 1948 10 Until the Educational Testing Service was established in January 1948 the Graduate Record Examination remained a project of the Carnegie Foundation 10 2011 revision edit In 2006 ETS announced plans to make significant changes in the format of the GRE Planned changes for the revised GRE included a longer testing time a departure from computer adaptive testing a new grading scale and an enhanced focus on reasoning skills and critical thinking for both the quantitative and qualitative sections 18 On April 2 2007 ETS announced the decision to cancel plans for revising the GRE 19 The announcement cited concerns over the ability to provide clear and equal access to the new test after the planned changes as an explanation for the cancellation The ETS stated however that they did plan to implement many of the planned test content improvements in the future although specific details regarding those changes were not initially announced Changes to the GRE took effect on November 1 2007 as ETS started to include new types of questions in the exam The changes mostly centered on fill in the blank type answers for the mathematics section that requires the test taker to fill in the blank directly without being able to choose from a multiple choice list of answers ETS announced plans to introduce two of these new types of questions in each quantitative section while the majority of questions would be presented in the regular format 20 Since January 2008 the Reading Comprehension within the verbal sections has been reformatted passages line numbers will be replaced with highlighting when necessary in order to focus the test taker on specific information in the passage to help students more easily find the pertinent information in reading passages 21 In December 2009 ETS announced plans to move forward with significant revisions to the GRE in 2011 22 Changes include a new 130 170 scoring scale the elimination of certain question types such as antonyms and analogies the addition of an online calculator and the elimination of the CAT format of question by question adjustment in favor of a section by section adjustment 23 On August 1 2011 the Revised GRE General test replaced General GRE test The revised GRE is said to be better by design and provides a better test taking experience The new types of questions in the revised format are intended to test the skills needed in graduate and business schools programs 24 From July 2012 onwards GRE announced an option for users to customize their scores called ScoreSelect 25 Before October 2002 edit The earliest versions of the GRE tested only for verbal and quantitative ability For a number of years before October 2002 the GRE had a separate Analytical Ability section which tested candidates on logical and analytical reasoning abilities This section was replaced by the Analytical Writing Assessment 26 27 Structure editThe computer based GRE General Test consists of six sections The first section is always the analytical writing section involving separately timed issue and argument tasks The next five sections consist of two verbal reasoning sections two quantitative reasoning sections and either an experimental or research section These five sections may occur in any order The experimental section does not count towards the final score but is not distinguished from the scored sections Unlike the computer adaptive test before August 2011 the GRE General Test is a multistage test where the examinee s performance on earlier sections determines the difficulty of subsequent sections using a technique known as computer adaptive testing This format allows the examined person to freely move back and forth between questions within each section and the testing software allows the user to mark questions within each section for later review if time remains The entire testing procedure lasts about 3 hours 45 minutes 28 29 One minute breaks are offered after each section and a 10 minute break after the third section The paper based GRE General Test also consists of six sections The analytical writing is split up into two sections one section for each issue and argument task The next four sections consist of two verbal and two quantitative sections in varying order There is no experimental section on the paper based test Verbal section edit The computer based verbal sections assess reading comprehension critical reasoning and vocabulary usage The verbal test is scored on a scale of 130 170 in 1 point increments Before August 2011 the scale was 200 800 in 10 point increments In a typical examination each verbal section consists of 20 questions to be completed in 30 minutes 28 Each verbal section consists of about 6 text completion 4 sentence equivalence and 10 critical reading questions The changes in 2011 include a reduced emphasis on rote vocabulary knowledge and the elimination of antonyms and analogies Text completion items have replaced sentence completions and new reading question types allowing for the selection of multiple answers were added Quantitative section edit The computer based quantitative sections assess basic high school level mathematical knowledge and reasoning skills The quantitative test is scored on a scale of 130 170 in 1 point increments Before August 2011 the scale was 200 800 in 10 point increments In a typical examination each quantitative section consists of 20 questions to be completed in 35 minutes 28 Each quantitative section consists of about 8 quantitative comparisons 9 problem solving items and 3 data interpretation questions The changes in 2011 include the addition of numeric entry items requiring the examinee to fill in the blank and multiple choice items requiring the examinee to select multiple correct responses 30 Analytical writing section edit The analytical writing section consists of two different essays an issue task and an argument task The writing section is graded on a scale of 0 6 in half point increments The essays are written on a computer using a word processing program specifically designed by ETS The program allows only basic computer functions and does not contain a spell checker or other advanced features Each essay is scored by at least two readers on a six point holist scale If the two scores are within one point the average of the scores is taken If the two scores differ by more than a point a third reader examines the response Issue Task edit The test taker is given 30 minutes to write an essay about a selected topic 31 Issue topics are selected from a pool of questions which the GRE Program has published in its entirety Individuals preparing for the GRE may access the pool of tasks on the ETS website 32 Argument Task edit The test taker will be given an argument i e a series of facts and considerations leading to a conclusion and asked to write an essay that critiques the argument Test takers are asked to consider the argument s logic and to make suggestions about how to improve the logic of the argument Test takers are expected to address the logical flaws of the argument and not provide a personal opinion on the subject The time allotted for this essay is 30 minutes 28 The Arguments are selected from a pool of topics which the GRE Program has published in its entirety Individuals preparing for the GRE may access the pool of tasks on the ETS website 33 Experimental section edit The experimental section which can be either verbal or quantitative contains new questions ETS is considering for future use Although the experimental section does not count towards the test taker s score it is unidentified and appears identical to the scored sections Because test takers have no definite way of knowing which section is experimental it is typically advised that test takers try their best and be focused on every section Sometimes an identified research section at the end of the test is given instead of the experimental section 34 There is no experimental section on the paper based GRE 35 Scoring editAn examinee can miss one or more questions on a multiple choice section and still receive a perfect score of 170 Likewise even if no question is answered correctly 130 is the lowest possible score 11 Verbal and qualitative reasoning scores are given in one point increments and analytical writing scores are given in half point increments on a scale of 0 to 6 36 37 Scaled score percentiles edit The percentiles for the current General test and the concordance with the prior format 38 are as follows According to interpretive data published by ETS from July 1 2015 to June 30 2018 about 2 million people have taken the test Based on performance of individuals the mean and standard deviation of verbal section were 150 24 and 8 44 Whereas mean and standard deviation for quantitative section were 153 07 and 9 24 Analytical writing has a mean of 3 55 with a standard deviation of 0 86 39 Scaled score Verbal reasoning percentile Verbal prior scale Quantitative reasoning percentile Quantitative prior scale170 99 760 800 96 800169 99 740 750 94 800168 98 720 730 92 800167 98 710 89 800166 97 700 87 800165 96 680 690 85 790164 94 660 670 83 790163 92 650 80 780162 90 630 640 78 770161 88 620 75 770160 85 600 610 72 760159 82 590 69 750158 79 570 580 65 740157 75 560 62 730156 72 540 550 59 720155 67 530 55 700 710154 63 510 520 51 690153 59 500 48 680152 53 480 490 44 660 670151 50 460 470 40 640 650150 45 450 36 630149 40 430 440 33 610 620148 36 420 29 590 600147 32 410 25 570 580146 28 390 400 22 550 560145 25 380 18 530 540144 22 370 15 500 520143 19 350 360 13 480 490142 16 340 11 460 470141 14 330 9 430 450140 11 320 7 400 420139 9 310 6 380 390138 8 300 4 350 370137 6 290 3 330 340136 5 280 3 300 320135 4 280 2 280 290134 3 270 1 260 270133 2 260 1 240 250132 2 250 lt 1 220 230131 1 240 lt 1 200 210130 lt 1 200 230 lt 1 200 nbsp Field wise distribution of takers of GRE revised General Test 40 Analytical Writing score Writing Below6 995 5 985 924 5 814 573 5 393 152 5 72 21 5 11 lt 10 5 lt 1 Field wise distribution of test takers is limited to those who earned their college degrees up to two years before the test date ETS provides no score data for non traditional students who have been out of school more than two years although its own report RR 99 16 indicated that 22 of all test takers in 1996 were over the age of 30 GRE Subject Tests editIn addition to the General Test there are also three GRE Subject Tests testing knowledge in the specific areas of Mathematics Physics and Psychology The length of each exam is 170 minutes In the past subject tests were also offered in the areas of Computer Science Economics Revised Education Engineering English Geology History Music Political Science Sociology and Biochemistry Cell and Molecular Biology In April 1998 the Revised Education and Political Science exams were discontinued In April 2000 the History and Sociology exams were discontinued with Economics Engineering Music and Geology being discontinued in April 2001 41 The Computer Science exam was discontinued after April 2013 42 Biochemistry Cell and Molecular Biology was discontinued in December 2016 The GRE Biology Test and GRE Literature in English Test tests were discontinued in May 2021 43 The GRE Chemistry Test was discontinued in May 2023 44 Use in admissions editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Many graduate schools in the United States require GRE results as part of the admissions process The GRE is a standardized test intended to measure all graduates abilities in tasks of general academic nature regardless of their fields of specialization and the extent to which undergraduate education has developed their verbal skills quantitative skills and abstract thinking In addition to GRE scores admission to graduate schools depends on several other factors such as GPA letters of recommendation and statements of purpose 45 Furthermore unlike other standardized admissions tests such as the SAT LSAT and MCAT the use and weight of GRE scores vary considerably not only from school to school but also from department to department and program to program 46 For instance most business schools and economics programs require very high GRE or GMAT scores for entry while engineering programs are known to allow more score variation Liberal arts programs may only consider the applicant s verbal score while mathematics and science programs may only consider quantitative ability Some schools use the GRE in admissions decisions but not in funding decisions others use it for selection of scholarship and fellowship candidates but not for admissions In some cases the GRE may be a general requirement for graduate admissions imposed by the university while particular departments may not consider the scores at all 47 Graduate schools will typically provide the average scores of previously admitted students and information about how the GRE is considered in admissions and funding decisions In some cases programs have hard cut off requirements for the GRE for example the Yale Economics PhD program requires a minimum quantitative score of 160 to apply 48 The best way to ascertain how a particular school or program evaluates a GRE score in the admissions process is to contact the person in charge of graduate admissions for the specific program in question In February 2016 the University of Arizona James E Rogers College of Law became the first law school to accept either the GRE or the Law School Admissions Test LSAT from all applicants 49 50 51 The college made the decision after conducting a study showing that the GRE is a valid and reliable predictor of students first term law school grades In the spring of 2017 Harvard Law School announced it was joining University of Arizona Law in accepting the GRE in addition to the LSAT from applicants to its three year J D program 52 After a trial cycle of GRE free admissions for Fall 2021 University of California Berkeley voted to drop the GRE requirement for most graduate program admissions for Fall 2022 as well 53 University of Michigan Ann Arbor shortly followed announcing that they would drop the GRE requirements for Ph D admissions beginning with the 2022 23 admissions cycle 54 By late 2022 the trend had intensified 13 MBA edit GRE score can be used for taking admission in MBA in foreign colleges The GMAT Graduate Management Admission Test is a computer adaptive standardized test in mathematics and the English language for measuring aptitude to succeed academically in graduate business studies Business schools commonly use the test as one of many selection criteria for admission into an MBA program Starting in 2009 many business schools began accepting the GRE in lieu of a GMAT score Policies varied widely for several years However as of the 2014 2015 admissions season most business schools accept both tests equally Either a GMAT score or a GRE score can be submitted for an application to an MBA program Business schools also accept either score for their other non MBA Masters and Ph D programs The primary issue on which business school test acceptance policies vary is in how old a GRE or GMAT score can be before it is no longer accepted The standard is that scores cannot be more than 5 years old e g Wharton 55 MIT Sloan 56 Columbia Business School 57 Intellectual clubs edit Some GRE scores usually pre 2002 ones are accepted as qualifying evidence to intellectual clubs such as Intertel 58 Mensa 59 and the Triple Nine Society 60 the minimum passing score depending on the selectivity of the society and the time period when the test was taken Intertel accepts scores in the 99th percentile how obtained after 2011 while Mensa and TNS do not accept any score post September 2001 Preparation editA variety of resources are available for those wishing to prepare for the GRE ETS provides preparation software called PowerPrep which contains two practice tests of retired questions as well as further practice questions and review material Since the software replicates both the test format and the questions used it can be useful to predict the actual GRE scores ETS does not license their past questions to any other company making them the only source for official retired material ETS used to publish the BIG BOOK which contained a number of actual GRE questions however this publishing was abandoned Several companies provide courses books and other unofficial preparation materials Some students taking the GRE use a test preparation company Students who do not use these courses often rely on material from university text books GRE preparation books sample tests and free web resources Testing locations editWhile the general and subject tests are held at many undergraduate institutions the computer based general test can be held in over 1000 locations 61 with appropriate technological accommodations In the United States students in major cities or from large universities will usually find a nearby test center while those in more isolated areas may have to travel a few hours to an urban or university location Many industrialized countries also have test centers but at times test takers must cross country borders Criticism editBias edit Algorithmic bias edit Critics have claimed that the computer adaptive methodology may discourage some test takers since the question difficulty changes with performance 62 For example if the test taker is presented with remarkably easy questions halfway into the exam they may infer that they are not performing well which will influence their abilities as the exam continues even though question difficulty is subjective By contrast standard testing methods may discourage students by giving them more difficult items earlier on Critics have also stated that the computer adaptive method of placing more weight on the first several questions is biased against test takers who typically perform poorly at the beginning of a test due to stress or confusion before becoming more comfortable as the exam continues 63 On the other hand standard fixed form tests could equally be said to be biased against students with less testing stamina since they would need to be approximately twice the length of an equivalent computer adaptive test to obtain a similar level of precision 64 Implicit bias edit The GRE has also been subjected to the same racial bias criticisms that have been lodged against other admissions tests In 1998 The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education noted that the mean score for black test takers in 1996 was 389 on the verbal section 409 on the quantitative section and 423 on the analytic while white test takers averaged 496 538 and 564 respectively 65 The National Association of Test Directors Symposia in 2004 stated a belief that simple mean score differences may not constitute evidence of bias unless the populations are known to be equal in ability 66 A more effective accepted and empirical approach is the analysis of differential test functioning which examines the differences in item response theory curves for subgroups the best approach for this is the DFIT framework 67 Weak indicator of graduate school performance edit The GREs are criticized for not being a true measure of whether a student will be successful in graduate school Robert Sternberg now of Cornell University 68 working at Yale University at the time of the study a long time critic of modern intelligence testing in general found the GRE general test was weakly predictive of success in graduate studies in psychology 69 The strongest relationship was found for the now defunct analytical portion of the exam The ETS published a report What is the Value of the GRE that points out the predictive value of the GRE on a student s index of success at the graduate level 70 The problem with earlier studies is the statistical phenomenon of restriction of range A correlation coefficient is sensitive to the range sampled for the test Specifically if only students accepted to graduate programs are studied in Sternberg amp Williams and other research the relationship is occluded Validity coefficients range from 30 to 45 between the GRE and both first year and overall graduate GPA in ETS study 71 Kaplan and Saccuzzo state that the criterion that the GRE best predicts is first year grades in graduate school However this correlation is only in the high tens to low twenties If the test correlates with a criterion at the 4 level then it accounts for 16 of the variability in that criterion with the other 84 resulting from unknown factors and errors 72 p 303 Graduate schools may be placing too much importance on standardized tests rather than on factors that more fully account for graduate school success such as a thesis requiring Honours degree prior research experience GPAs or work experience While graduate schools do consider these areas many times schools will not consider applicants that score below a current score of roughly 314 1301 prior score Kaplan and Saccuzzo also state that the GRE predict s neither clinical skill nor even the ability to solve real world problems p 303 In 2007 a study by a university found a correlation of 30 to 45 between the GRE and both first year and overall graduate GPA The correlation between GRE score and graduate school completion rates ranged from 11 for the now defunct analytical section to 39 for the GRE subject test Correlations with faculty ratings ranged from 35 to 50 71 Historical susceptibility to cheating edit In May 1994 Kaplan Inc warned ETS in hearings before a New York legislative committee that the small question pool available to the computer adaptive test made it vulnerable to cheating ETS assured investigators that it was using multiple sets of questions and that the test was secure This was later discovered to be incorrect 73 In December 1994 prompted by student reports of recycled questions then Director of GRE Programs for Kaplan Inc and current CEO of Knewton Jose Ferreira led a team of 22 staff members deployed to 9 U S cities to take the exam Kaplan Inc then presented ETS with 150 questions representing 70 80 of the GRE 74 According to early news releases ETS appeared grateful to Stanley H Kaplan Inc for identifying the security problem However on December 31 ETS sued Kaplan Inc for violation of a federal electronic communications privacy act copyright laws breach of contract fraud and a confidentiality agreement signed by test takers on test day 75 On January 2 1995 an agreement was reached out of court Additionally in 1994 the scoring algorithm for the computer adaptive form of the GRE was discovered to be insecure ETS acknowledged that Kaplan Inc employees led by Jose Ferreira reverse engineered key features of the GRE scoring algorithms The researchers found that a test taker s performance on the first few questions of the exam had a disproportionate effect on the test taker s final score To preserve the integrity of scores ETS adopted a more sophisticated scoring algorithm See also editList of admissions testsGRE Subject Tests GRE Mathematics Test GRE Physics Test GRE Psychology TestDiscontinued GRE Subject Tests GRE Biochemistry Cell and Molecular Biology Test discontinued December 2016 76 GRE Biology Test discontinued May 2021 76 GRE Chemistry Test discontinued May 2023 76 GRE Economics Test discontinued April 2001 77 GRE Literature in English Test discontinued May 2021 76 Other tests Law School Admission Test LSAT Medical College Admission Test MCAT Graduate Management Admission Test GMAT Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering GATE SAT ACT test Test of English as a Foreign Language TOEFL International English Language Testing System IELTS References edit GRE Revised General Test About the GRE revised General Test Ets org a b GRE Revised General Test Test Centers and Dates Ets org Registration Test Centers and Dates Ets org A Snapshot of the Individuals Who Took GRE General Test PDF a b GRE Revised General Test Fees Ets org Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Retrieved December 28 2013 a b GRE Revised General Test Fee Reduction Program Ets org GRE Registration and Information Bulletin Archived December 28 2009 at the Wayback Machine Tests that make you eligible for Canadian universities shiksha com studyabroad shiksha com Retrieved September 18 2019 Alternative Admissions and Scholarship Selection Measures in Higher Education Assessment in Action by Sedlacek William E Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development Vol 35 Issue 4 January 2003 Archived from the original on June 27 2012 Retrieved August 29 2017 a b c d Misericordia Sophomores Take Graduate Record Tests Wilkes Barre Times Leader Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania March 25 1949 p 10 Retrieved May 29 2018 via Newspapers com Graduate Record Examination project was initiated in 1936 as a joint experiment in higher education by the graduate school deans of four eastern universities and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Until the Educational Testing Service was established in January 1948 the Graduate Record Examination remained a project of the Carnegie Foundation a b GRE Revised General Test Scores Ets org MBA Channel GRE Wharton joins the club 31 July 2009 a b GRExit gains momentum as Ph D programs drop exam requirement Science Retrieved December 2 2022 a b Records Are Being Made Examinations Are Being Given to Graduates of University Iowa City Press Citizens January 8 1941 Retrieved May 29 2018 U W Distinguished By Selection For Requirement Wisconsin State Journal Madison Wisconsin November 19 1938 p 9 Retrieved May 29 2018 via Newspapers com Representatives of Carnegie Foundation Visits Texas Tech Lubbock Morning Avalanche Lubbock Texas February 20 1942 p 8 Retrieved May 29 2018 via Newspapers com Students Taking Tests For Degrees College Seniors Facing Immediate Induction Into Armed Services Qualify Lansing State Journal Lansing Michigan April 11 1943 p 5 Retrieved May 29 2018 via Newspapers com Comparison Chart of GRE Changes Princetonreview com Archived from the original on June 18 2008 Retrieved May 29 2018 ETS Home Ets org Archived from the original on September 23 2009 Retrieved April 2 2007 ETS Home Ets org Archived from the original on July 23 2009 Retrieved September 19 2007 Revisions to the Computer based GRE General Test in 2008 Archived from the original on August 22 2008 Retrieved January 18 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link A New Look for Graduate Entrance Test The New York Times December 6 2009 GRE Revised General Test For Institutions Ets org Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved December 15 2009 GRE Revised General Test Frequently Asked Questions Ets org GRE Score Select Archived from the original on May 25 2012 Essay now an option on GRE s The Michigan Daily March 26 2002 Retrieved November 25 2021 E Powers Donald November 1986 TEST PREPARATION FOR THE GRE ANALYTICAL ABILITY MEASURE DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS FOR SUBGROUPS OF GRE TEST TAKERS PDF Educational Testing Service a b c d ETS Home Ets org Archived from the original on May 14 2009 Retrieved September 19 2007 GRE Revised General Test How the Test is Scored Ets org citationm m last Weiner Green first Sharon last2 Wolf first2 Ira K title Barron s How to Prepare for the GRE edition 17 year 2009 page 9 publisher Barron s Educational Series isbn 0 7641 7471 1 GRE Revised General Test Analytical Writing Ets org GRE General Test Analytical Writing Issue Task Topics Ets org GRE General Test Analytical Writing Argument Task Topics Ets org GRE General Test Test Content and Structure Ets org Archived from the original on May 29 2018 Retrieved October 30 2010 The official guide to the GRE general test Educational Testing Service 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill Education 2016 ISBN 9781259862410 OCLC 966680085 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link What is a Good GRE Score www princetonreview com Retrieved November 23 2021 GRE Scores What is a Good Score www test guide com Retrieved November 23 2021 Concordance Information PDF Ets org Archived from the original PDF on December 9 2020 Retrieved May 29 2018 Understanding Your GRE General Test Scores For Test Takers www ets org Retrieved October 11 2019 GRE Guide Table PDF Ets org Retrieved May 29 2018 Engineering GRE Engineering Subject Test Archived from the original on January 10 2006 Retrieved January 24 2006 GRE Computer Science Test Archived from the original on January 2 2013 Retrieved January 14 2013 About the GRE Subject Tests For Test Takers www ets org Retrieved July 1 2021 GRE Subject Test to be Computer Delivered www ets org Retrieved April 2 2023 Apply Harvard University The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Gsas harvard edu Retrieved May 29 2018 You CAN Get Into Grad School With Low GRE Scores academical Howtogetintograduateschool com June 19 2016 Retrieved May 29 2018 How Admission Committees Use GRE Scores Educaid Tutoring Retrieved February 14 2015 Application Information Department of Economics economics yale edu Retrieved May 29 2018 UA Becomes First Law School to Open Admissions to All GRE Test Takers after Study Reveals Test Validity University of Arizona Law February 10 2016 Retrieved April 27 2017 Randazzo Sara February 22 2016 LSAT s Grip on Law School Admissions Loosens Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved April 27 2017 Olson Elizabeth May 5 2016 Law School s Acceptance of GRE Test Scores Provokes Tussle The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2017 In pilot program Harvard Law will accept GRE for admission Harvard Law Today Harvard Law Today Retrieved March 10 2017 Nietzel Michael September 30 2021 Most University Of California At Berkeley Graduate Programs Will Not Require The GRE This Year Forbes Nietzel Michael February 25 2022 University Of Michigan To Drop GRE For Ph D Admissions Forbes Application Requirements The Wharton MBA Program Archived July 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine 9 May 2013 MIT Sloan Application Instructions Archived June 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine 9 May 2013 Columbia Business School MBA Program Application Requirements Archived May 11 2013 at the Wayback Machine 9 May 2013 Intertel Join us www intertel iq org Retrieved May 8 2021 Qualifying test scores American Mensa Retrieved May 8 2021 Test Scores www triplenine org Retrieved May 8 2021 GRE General Test Registration For Test Takers GRE Revised General Test Frequently Asked Questions Testing service cancels February GRE Archived from the original on October 17 2007 Weiss D J Kingsbury G G 1984 Application of computerized adaptive testing to educational problems Journal of Educational Measurement 21 4 361 375 doi 10 1111 j 1745 3984 1984 tb01040 x Estimating the Effect a Ban on Racial Preferences Would Have on African American Admissions to the Nation s Leading Graduate Schools The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 19 19 80 82 1998 doi 10 2307 2998926 JSTOR 2998926 The Achievement Gap Test Bias or School Structures National Association of Test Directors 2004 Symposia Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 31 2009 Retrieved November 4 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Oshima T C Morris S B 2008 Raju s Differential Functioning of Items and Tests DFIT Educational Measurement Issues and Practice 27 3 43 50 doi 10 1111 j 1745 3992 2008 00127 x Robert Sternberg joins Human Ecology faculty Feb 1 Cornell Chronicle www news cornell edu Sternberg R J Williams W M 1997 Does the Graduate Record Examination predict meaningful success in the graduate training of psychology A case study American Psychologist 52 6 630 641 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 52 6 630 Value of GRE PDF Ets org Archived from the original PDF on June 11 2012 Retrieved May 29 2018 a b Kuncel N R Hezlett S A Ones D S 2001 A comprehensive meta analysis of the predictive validity of the Graduate Record Examination Implications for graduate student selection and performance PDF Psychological Bulletin 127 1 162 181 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 127 1 162 PMID 11271753 Archived from the original PDF on September 27 2007 Kaplan R M amp Saccuzzo D P 2009 Psychological testing Principles applications and issues Belmont CA Wadsworth Frantz Douglas Nordheimer Jon September 28 1997 Giant of Exam Business Keeps Quiet on Cheating The New York Times Retrieved April 2 2010 Computer Admissions Test Found to Be Ripe for Abuse The New York Times December 16 1994 Retrieved April 2 2010 Boxall Bettina January 1 1995 Educational Testing Service Sues Exam Coaching Firm Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 4 2010 a b c d About the GRE Subject Tests For Test Takers History of GRE Test When Why and Who Created the GRE Exam Retrieved December 17 2023 External links editOfficial website GRE information website for residents of Mainland China English version Archived November 8 2017 at the Wayback Machine by the Chinese National Education Examinations Authority Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Graduate Record Examinations amp oldid 1210382581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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