Problems
with access to the new test cited by ETS as the
reason for cancellation.
The
Educational Testing Service has cancelled plans
to launch the revised Graduate Record Examinations
(GRE) General Test in September 2007 because GRE
officials believe there are problems guaranteeing
complete access to the new Internet-based test.
The test will continue to be offered in its current
computer-adaptive testing format indefinitely.
According
to David Killoran, PowerScore Test Preparation
CEO, “In March we met with ETS officials,
and given the state of the test development at
that time, the cancellation of the revised GRE
is not a surprise. ETS had already delayed the
test from its first scheduled release date of
Fall 2006 and they did not seem to be much further
along in March 2007.”
The
reason the revised GRE General Test was cancelled
was mainly due to test taker access. The revised
test was to be sent over a new worldwide network
of 3,200 Internet-based testing centers. ETS officials
did not trust that full access to the General
Test for all students could be guaranteed.
“The
cancellation of the revised GRE is a very positive
development for test takers because the revised
GRE was a longer and more difficult test than
the current GRE,” Killoran explains. “We
had been advising students to take the GRE prior
to the release of the new test, and now students
will be able to schedule the GRE for a date that
is convenient for them. And, fortunately, retaining
the current test format means there will not be
an interruption of test availability in August,
as had originally been planned.”
The
GRE revisions were to constitute a major change
in the length and question format of the exam.
According to ETS, the GRE was to be redesigned
by the GRE board to increase test validity, enhance
security measures, better evaluate students’
performance abilities, increase worldwide access
to the test, and make better use of advances in
technology and psychometric design. The new test
was designed to emphasize complex reasoning skills,
which are closely associated with graduate work,
and to more accurately gauge students’ success
in graduate school. ETS had planned to improve
student access to its tests by adding thousands
of testing sites worldwide in the next two years.
PowerScore
instructors and testing experts are available
to explain the cancellation of the revised GRE.
David Killoran, CEO and Director of Course Development,
and Jon Denning, Instructor and Course Developer,
can provide explanations regarding the cancellation
of the revised exam. As PowerScore founder, David
Killoran has over 16 years experience in the test
preparation industry, and has overseen the preparation
of thousands of students. To speak with or schedule
an interview with either David Killoran or Jon
Denning, please call 800-545-1750 or email lpilcher@powerscore.com.
Additionally,
PowerScore Instructors can assist students applying
for entry into the Graduate School of their choice.
PowerScore has gathered a team of admissions experts—including
former graduate school admissions board members,
college instructors, and students from top ten
graduate schools—to address admissions counseling
and admissions essay needs. Weaknesses in applications
may include a low GPA or GRE score, inconsistent
undergraduate performance, non-traditional undergraduate
major, and time gaps in applicants’ work
history. Our counselors will develop a plan tailored
to students’ needs in order to provide them
with the best possible application.
PowerScore
is one of the world’s fastest growing test
preparation companies. Headquartered on Hilton
Head Island in South Carolina, PowerScore offers
GMAT, GRE, LSAT, and SAT preparation classes in
over 75 locations in the U.S. and abroad. For
more information, please visit www.powerscore.com. |