Most people spend one to three months studying a few hours a week studying GRE, meaning you require between 8 to 120 hours to prepare. Apart from preparation, below are some of the tips you need in order to pass GRE.

Apportioning the right time for study will help you avoid time wastage and the problem of procrastination because the GRE is several weeks away. A good schedule and GRE prep course helps you to apportion good amount of time for the practice tests, to read the different sections of the exam, skim old notes from school and to read the books you are required to read in order to pass the GRE.

  1. Have a goal score: A goal score helps you to figure out how you are from success in GRE. A good goal helps you to put more efforts to study realizing that you need to attain it. For instance, it may help you put more hours into your study. If you are starting with practice GRE and other practice tests, the goal helps you to see how far you are from attaining your target. These tests help you to track how much effort you need to add in order to achieve your goal.

Other than that, you might start by focusing on the guideline on how many hours you need in order to add a given amount of points. For instance, you will need about 40 hours to add 5 points; about 80 hours to add 10 points; 160 hours to add 20 points and 240 hours to add around 30 points for your GRE.

However, the amount of time you need could depend on your individual circumstances.

To provide a guide, an average score is around 150-152 for the Verbal and Quantitative portions of the GRE, which are scored between 130–170. For the writing section scored between 0 and 6, the average is around 3.5.

  1. Tackling multiple blanks and Sentence Equivalence questions: GRE text completion question require you to fill one, two, or three blanks with the correct word. It is not given that multiple blank questions are more difficult than one-blank questions. The sentences will obviously contain clues to aid prediction of the correct word needed.

Filling one word correctly provides a clue for the remaining words. Plus, there is no obligation to tackle the blanks in order for the case of multiple-blank text completions.

Sentence Equivalence questions require you to choose words from a list to fill in that blank. The words must make sense in the sentence and give the sentence the same meaning.

You can use elimination to avoid words that do not make sense or that do not have a partner.

  1. Reading comprehension: To succeed in GRE Reading Comp, you need to read differently. Even if the passage discusses chemistry or other concepts, the issue is that the GRE comprehension does not test your knowledge in these matters.

Just take notes about the passage’s main idea, structure of the passage, and opinions, as well as noting down whose opinions they are. While taking these notes, ensure to make a Passage Map that helps you to engage in active reading while the notes will help you to answer the test questions.

GRE is an open book and so you need a detailed research.

  1. Quantitative Comparison can be dealt by memorizing by the Test Day because the four answer choices are always the same.
  2. Other areas: Problem solving questions might require you to pick numbers and then work with them instead of abstract unknown. Other areas of testing that you can revamp with a GRE prep course include algebra, geometry, and proportions.

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