| Information
Provided by Kaplan Test Prep
The
Paper & Pencil GRE is history.
Instead of presenting a preset mixture of easy, medium, and
hard questions the way traditional paper & pencil tests do,
the GRE CAT selects questions for you based on your performance.
It begins with a question of average difficulty. If you get
that question right, the computer shows you a harder question
next if you get it wrong, the CAT gives you an easier question.
So if you keep getting questions correct, the questions will
increase in difficulty. If you slip and make some mistakes,
the test will adjust and start giving you easier problems.
The CAT literally adapts to your performance this way.
A CAT
by definition provides everyone with a different mix of easy
and hard questions. The very purpose of the adaptive format
is to determine your score based on the level at which you
answer questions correctly about 50 percent of the time. That
means that the overall number you get right is not as important
as the level at which you start getting about half the questions
wrong.
On the
CAT, you see only one question at a time, and once you answer
a question it's part of your score, for better or worse. You
can't go back to a question later on. That means you cannot
skip around within a section and do questions in the order
that you prefer. Instead, you have to do your best to get
a question right the first time you see it.
GRE CAT
questions are not all worth the same to your score. How much
a question raises or lowers your score depends on when the
question appears in a section. A question early on in a CAT
section will affect your score more, for better or worse,
than one later on. That's because the computer makes larger
scoring jumps in the beginning of a section to approximate
your scoring level--it then makes smaller jumps as it fine-tunes
your score. You can only get a high score if you answer enough
medium problems correctly to see the hard problems.
GRE
CAT Sections & Structure
The GRE CAT has three scored sections: Verbal, Quantitative
(Math), and Analytical. The scored sections can be presented
in any order, and have the following basic format:
| Section |
Time |
Questions |
| Verbal |
30 minutes |
30 questions |
| Math |
45 minutes |
28 questions |
| Logic |
60 minutes |
35 questions |
You can
take as long as you like on any one question, but pace yourself
to answer the all the questions in each section in the allotted
time. Since there is a penalty for unanswered questions you
should answer every question, even if you have to guess at
random on the last few in order to finish the section on time.
The
Experimental Section
In addition to these three scored sections, there may be one
"experimental" section that looks just like one of the scored
sections but does not count toward your score. ETS uses the
experimental section to pre-test the questions that will show
up on the scored sections of future GREs. The main thing for
you to know about the experimental section is that it's unscored.
This section
looks just like one of the scored sections, so it's important
for you to do your best on it too you won't be able to tell
which section is the experimental one anyway. A lot of people
try hard to figure out which section is experimental. But
all you will know is that if you have two sections of one
measure type (and only one each of the others) then one of
these sections is the experimental one.
Trying
to figure out which section is experimental can actually be
hazardous to your test score. There's a good chance that you'll
guess wrong, and that's not worth the risk. The effort you
spend trying to guess which section is experimental can be
a real distraction too. Finally, it's doubtful that taking
a snooze during a section will help you; it may actually lower
your score if you can't get your brain working again at full
steam when the next section begins.
Sometimes
there's a fifth section called the "Research Section" which
does not count toward your score either. The Research Section
is optional, so there's absolutely no reason for you to complete
it.
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