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May 31, 2009 20:49

So. Something weird just happened to me. I practiced the GRE (and I am an English minor who is interested in the qualitative aspect of Sociology). Turns out my scores always end up better in the math then the verbal (aside from geometry). Why is that? I use words like "salubrious" every day ( Read more... )

gre woes

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Comments 11

hkitsune June 1 2009, 00:58:57 UTC
I think Princeton Review does a great job of compiling all the really awful tricks you can do to save time and energy.

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tisiphone June 1 2009, 01:08:51 UTC
Are you taking the adaptive practice tests? I have to fight like hell to stay on top of those because the more right answers you get the harder the next one is and soon you're trying to remember what "anchorite" means.

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sparklingsoull June 1 2009, 01:18:38 UTC
I am just doing the regular book one. I think my difficulty is how I get so nervous as I am studying I read through the word quickly. You know? Just a personal problem... either that or I'm an idiot.

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tisiphone June 1 2009, 01:20:39 UTC
Or you might be practicing wrong. Are you actually using flashcards or audio cues to help you learn the words, or are you just going through the tests?

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sparklingsoull June 1 2009, 01:27:20 UTC
I just started using audio to learn the words (which I will also put on while I am sleeping). Just until a month ago I would just go through the tests.

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sporkgoddess June 1 2009, 02:50:20 UTC

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nimiety June 1 2009, 14:15:45 UTC
Pretty much all the humanities applicants I've talked to have higher scores in verbal than in math, despite the different statistical centering.

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hermionephd June 1 2009, 06:16:25 UTC
One of the tricks is knowing where to find the tricks. :)

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