GRE's: who's taken them?

Delphi

Active member
I'm looking to start the whole grad school process. I have the grades (3.97, 4.0 in my major) and am in the process of being published. I'm in my junior year and start my honors thesis work next semester and I'm guessing the next big step besides that is taking the GRE's. I have talked to a few people, but most of them were pretty arrogant, so I could have gotten some bs information. Have any of you guys taken them? anyone looking to take them? advice, warnings? I want to get into a pretty sick grad school for history, so I have to make sure I have a solid mark on the GRE.
 
I would have to say that besides asking grad students, professors, and other administrators who are knowledgeable in regards to GREs, you best bet is to look online. There are tons of forums and message boards, as well as official sites that have more than enough information to allow yourself adequate preparation.
Personally, I would exhaust every person you can talk to, and every site you can visit. Take it all in, extract what you think you'll need, and go into the exam as prepared as you can be.
I doubt that many people on NS would have anything beneficial to tell you (even what I've said is probably just a reinstatement of your thoughts).
And just chill about it. Your grades seem to be fine. I'm not exactly sure what the process of applying to a history graduate program is, but make sure that every component of your application is as strong as it can be (duh).
 
thats wicked, i want to go to grad school for philosophy eventually but im still in second year.

besides i live in Canada so i think its different

good luck tho
 
You need to get the GRE books. All my friends are taking the GRE now (I have a few years cause Im taking an extra year to graduate and an extra year to ski). The math problems aren't hard, but you have to know how to do them.
 
the only thing I am worried about is the math portion. I am terrible at math and haven't taken a legitimate math course since senior year in highschool. I got owned in the math section on the SATs, which sucked because it really brought my overall total down. I have always gotten A's in math, but I learn it at a slower pace, so I've always been in the lower classes. Luckily I have the reading/reading comp and writing skills to overshadow my mathematical achilles heel. I am wondering if, as a history major, grad schools would be too concerned about a low math score?
 
I think it just depends on the school and program. Architecture schools dont really care about gpa and the gre. You just have to have a ballin portfolio.
 
i just took them on friday and couldn't be happier to have it over with, but here's my general impression of the whole process.
i used the princeton review book to study and i thought it helped a lot. a lot of good tools for making educated guesses, and the online practice tests are clutch. i'm the opposite of you and i'm really comfortable in math so i focused my studying on learning vocab, and i saw noticeable improvement over the month leading up to it. even if you think you're good at english, study the vocab as much as you can, especially because the verbal is scored easier than the math. this will help pad your score a little bit if you can ace it. as for the math, my test was SUPER geometry heavy. everyone told me to study formulas, which i blew off, and was glad i did. know how to take the areas of stuff, angle properties of various shapes, and practice basic algebra and you'll do okay.
in general, i thought by far the most helpful tip i got was with pacing myself. the way the GRE works is each question is a different point value/difficulty depending on whether you got the previous question right or wrong (which you probably already knew). but, its weighted really heavy towards the first half, so take 2/3 of the time to really work through the first 1/2 of the questions in both sections. this will set you in a score bracket that you're kind of stuck in regardless of how you perform in the second half, so it doesn't matter if you have to rush the later questions.
as for how much your overall performance really matters, grad schools don't really care about your GRE score as long as you're over the minimum threshold. of the schools i'm applying to, MIT had the highest minimum at 1200, so you're probably not going to see much above that. don't sweat it too hard, but take the time to study and do well the first time. apparently it looks bad if you have to take it more than once and i heard (although i don't know for sure) that they average your scores instead of just taking the highest like the SAT.
anyway, that's a pretty long winded insight, but feel free to throw more questions my way.
oh, and if you're comfortable with english/verbal, don't bother writing practice essays. it'll be a waste of your time.
 
I work for The Princeton Review part time, have taken the GRE course and will probably be teaching GRE prep classes this spring. PM me.
 
Where are you taking architecture that they didn't really factor your GPA into admissions?
 
Don't sweat it too hard man. If you've learned anything in college, you'll be just fine. I'd just polish up on the math a little bit if that's your weak spot. I wouldn't spend months prepping for it though.
I took the GMAT (generally considered the harder of the two) without even studying and I did just fine. Not trying to claim, I just think they hype those tests up a lot more than necessary.
Good luck bro!
 
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