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By Jessica Liebman
Sun Staff Writer
Attention, all students who plan to take the Graduate
Record Examination (GRE): do so before the revamped
version is offered in October 2006.
Ben Baron, vice president of graduate programs
at Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions, agrees. “We
are recommending to students that it is a good
idea to take the current format,” said Baron.
If for no other reason, students who sign up for
the GRE before October will avoid the soon-to-be
four hour exam.
Come October, the GRE will be a bit over four
hours long, an hour and thirty minutes longer
than the current test. Exam content and format
will undergo several revisions as well.
“From a content standpoint, the test maker
has been trying to make a better predictor of
grad school performance,” said Baron. To
achieve this goal, the new GRE will focus more
on critical reasoning and less on memorization.
The current GRE consists of three sections: verbal
reasoning, quantitative reasoning, and analytical
writing. In October, Educational Testing Services
(ETS) will replace analogies and antonyms with
sentence equivalencies.
“You'll read a passage and then choose which
one [out of five options] is the best paraphrase,”
said Baron. The verbal section will be made up
of two 40-minute sections, rather than one 30-minute
section.
As for math, ETS will eliminate some geometry
and add questions requiring test takers to interpret
charts, graphs, and tables. Instead of one 45-minute
section, the new quantitative reasoning section
will include two 40-minute sections.
Lastly, the analytical writing section will be
reduced to 30 minutes and include “more
focused questions to ensure original analytical
writing,” reports the ETS website, www.ets.org.
Why the sudden changes?
“There were several security issues,”
said Baron. “Students memorized questions
and posted them on the web.”
This enabled future test takers to access questions
that could potentially appear on an upcoming exam.
The GRE is currently computer-adaptive, meaning
that the test's difficulty is determined by the
test taker’s right or wrong answers. So,
while everybody receives customized tests, identical
questions are repeated on different days.
Michelle Lesser ’06, who took the GRE in
September 2005, feels that the computer-adaptive
test is problematic.
“I think it puts too much pressure on the
first few questions. If you answer the first question
incorrectly, your score is already lowered and
it is a lot more difficult to bring it up. I do
not think that more pressure should be put on
the first few questions. People can be more nervous
at the beginning of a test [and] would be at a
disadvantage,” said Lesser.
Beth Lapman, Northwestern University ’05,
has taken the GRE twice now; she does not believe
that security issues were serious enough to warrant
changes.
“Basically every question that Kaplan, Powerscore,
and Princeton Review offer is a question that
has appeared on past GREs- the ETS even gives
out a book of old tests. Even if people post GRE
questions and answers, we all know that just because
someone else had it on their test it by no means
indicates that it's going to be on your test —
in fact, it probably won't. If you did happen
to receive that same question, you would be just
as lucky as if you happened to have studied a
certain vocabulary word that then appeared on
your test,” said Lapman.
Starting in October, the GRE will become a linear
computer test administered on 29 dates throughout
the year. Each test date will have its own set
of questions, thus eliminating the risk of passing
on test information to future test takers. Because
the new exam will no longer be adaptive, it will
comprise a fuller range of easy, medium and difficult
questions.
Scores will change, too. What is now a 200-800
point exam will become a 120-179 point exam. This
is not the first time the GRE has been revised.
Three years ago, ETS eliminated an analytical
section; more recently, the paper test became
a computer exam.
“They are trying to make it as effective
a test it can be,” said Baron.
For now, Kaplan continues to help students prepare
for the current format. Courses are set to change
this summer.
Baron warns students who wish to take the test
before October 2006 to secure a test spot early.
“There will be a big rush to take the test
before it changes. This does mean slots could
fill up,” said Baron. The number of GRE
administrations in any given region will depend
on the test volumes in that region.
As ETS releases sample questions, test prep services
like Kaplan are beginning to produce practice
questions for students taking the October 2006
exam.
“We’ve been doing this for 70 years,
so we are familiar with how tests change. This
is fairly standard for us,” said Baron.
Ithaca’s Kaplan Test Preparation Center
will host an informational seminar about the GRE
on November 3 at 6pm. Representatives will discuss
the current exam and its future changes.
Overall, ETS expects that revisions will increase
GRE validity.
The new exam will ”emphasize complex reasoning
skills that are closely aligned to graduate work.
We'll include more real-life scenarios,”
says www.ets.org.
Some people are still not convinced that the current
GRE predicts success for students entering into
varied graduate programs. Others question the
overall effectiveness of the exam's computer-based
administration.
“I understand that … graduate schools
need an objective measure for their candidates.
However, I do not believe that each program should
put equal emphasis on the test. For example, engineering
graduate applicants will need to score higher
on the math than a classics Ph.D. student. For
this reason, I do not think that ETS's use of
percentiles is accurate or should even be considered.
It is not fair to compare people with such diverse
backgrounds and goals on the same scale,”
said Lesser.
Lapman feels the analytical writing segment is
the most valid section of the GRE.
“I think [it's] fantastic. It gives bright
people [a chance] to show they are intelligent
and eloquent, despite the fact that they don't
know what 'jejune' means,” she said.
Perhaps test takers will be more satisfied with
the new-fangled October 2006 exam; time will certainly
tell. (And, in case you were wondering, 'jejune'
means ‘unsophisticated.’) |