The Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) General Test is a multiple-choice admission test for applicants to graduate schools. The test is administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), under the sponsorship of the Graduate Record Examinations Board. The GRE is a computer-adaptive test (CAT), and consists of three scored sections
| Sections |
Score Range |
Number of Questions |
Topics |
Time |
| -----------------Computer Tutorial----------------- |
NA |
Essays |
1-6 |
2 |
One Issue-One Argument |
45 min for Issue
30 min for Argument |
| -----------------Break----------------- |
10 Minute |
Verbal |
200-800 |
30 |
6 Sentence Completion,
7 Analogy,
8 Reading Comprehension
9 Antonyms |
30 Minute |
Math |
200-800 |
28 |
14 Problem Solving
14 Quantitative Comparison |
45 Minute |
Total |
1600 |
|
58 |
3 Hours Approx |
Educational Testing Service® (ETS®), in consultation with the Graduate Record Examinations® (GRE®) Board, announced plans to include two new question types in the computer-based GRE General Test beginning in November. Test takers may encounter one of these new questions in the Verbal Reasoning or Quantitative Reasoning sections of the computer-based GRE General Test. The new Verbal question type is a text completion question that requires the test taker to fill in two or three blanks within a passage from separate multiple-choice lists. Currently, the Verbal section contains text completion questions that require test takers to fill in one blank within a passage from a single multiple-choice list. The new Quantitative question type will be a numeric entry question that requires test takers to type their answer as a number in a box, or as a fraction in two boxes.
GRE Strategies :