| The
Daily Cardinal, Online newspaper of University
of Wisconsin-Madison
Students
planning to apply to graduate school next year can expect
to take a revised entrance exam.
The Graduate
Record Exam is used by a variety of graduate programs to gauge
a student’s potential to perform in graduate school.
At UW-Madison, individual graduate programs can determine
if the GRE is required for their program, according to Assistant
Dean of Graduate School Education and Administration Lois
Beecham.
Starting
Oct. 2006, the Educational Testing Service will administer
a new GRE in an effort to better represent the complex reasoning
skills required for graduate school. Critics of the current
GRE say it relies on memorization of vocabulary and formulas.
The test’s duration will also increase from 2.5 hours
to over four hours.
The GRE
will still consist of verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning
and analytical writing.
The quantitative
reasoning section will reduce the number of geometry problems
and increase the number of data interpretation problems and
real-life scenarios. These problems do not require the memorization
of formulas and better represent the demands of graduate school,
according to powerscore instructor and assistant course developer
Jon Denning.
“You
could approach it without a background of math and still do
OK,” Denning said.
The test’s
verbal reasoning section will focus on analytical reading
rather than vocabulary-based questions such as antonyms, analogies
and sentence completion. Denning said this could benefit well-qualified
students for whom English is a second language.
“It
wasn’t a test of your ability to read well and construct
these complex ideas. It was simply a test of the words that
you know,” Denning said. “Even if there was one
word they weren’t sure of, they could still understand
what they read and answer questions about it.”
The GRE
currently uses a computer-adaptive format, where higher-level
questions are given to students who correctly answered the
previous question. Each question is pulled from an ETS computer
data bank, so some students may have already seen some of
the questions. The computer adaptive format may also reward
students that guess the correct answer by giving them higher-scoring
questions.
“The
questions in the beginning count a lot more toward your final
score than the questions toward the end,” Denning said.
“You dig yourself in an early hole and it’s hard
to get out of.”
The revised
GRE will use a linear format giving each student the same
questions. Each version of the test will only be used once
to avoid repeat questions. The test will only be conducted
29 times a year instead of constantly.
“Instructors
can get more involved in the way that they teach people as
opposed to simply putting all the burden on the student to
memorize,” Denning added. |