Thursday, March 5, 2020
How Much Vocab Do you Really Need to Know for the GRE
How Much Vocab Do you Really Need to Know for the GRE GRE/MAT Graduate School Blog Do you remember studying a ton of vocabulary for your SAT back in high school? Well, you probably took SAT right before the ETS reconfigured the whole thing and removed the vocabulary section. Thatâs right, nowadays high school students donât have to memorize a giant list of vocabulary to succeed on the standardized tests that get them into universities. Such a pleasure is reserved entirely for grown adults who want to get into the grad school. Why does the GRE have Text Completion questions? Remember that the GRE is supposed to act as a totally level playing field, that gives test takers across the country an equal shot regardless of the schools they went to, the areas they majored in, or, frankly, the time they spent in the library during undergrad. One gauge of how prepared someone is to succeed in grad school is how strong her vocabulary is, especially since academia revolves so much around writing and publishing research. Therefore, a strong performance on the GREâs Verbal Reasoning section doesnât just communicate that you can analyze text well, but that you can hold your own with your soon-to-be peers. Thatâs right, you need a strong vocabulary for the GRE. Okay, so how many words do I have to learn? Some resources list around 350, and the lists you find in test prep books can range in scope from 900 to 4,500. The best rule of thumb is to push yourself to study a lot of words but to keep it manageable. Try to keep it under 1,000 to give yourself a reasonable goal. Any amount much higher than that can just end up being overwhelming and potentially discourage you from taking up an impactful study routine. Keep in mind that the average adult English speaker knows upwards of 40,000 words, so making sure you have a firm grasp of an extra 600 to 1,000 especially impressive ones really isnât that huge of a task. The real secret is to study your GRE vocab daily, even on weekends. Make flashcards for a new 50 to 100 words each week and study for as many minutes a day as you need to in order to feel confident with that set of vocabulary before you add new words for your pile next week. You can find lists of vocab like this one from GreenLight Test Prepwith some quick Googling, and there are services like Memorang that provide pre-made flashcards for the GRE as well. Any time you see a word you donât recognize on a practice test or in drills in a test book, jot it down and add it to next weekâs pile. Lastly, make sure to keep reviewing the old vocabulary, since you are not just trying to retain these words for test day, but for grad school. What do I do if I see a word I donât know on the test? This is an inevitable situation. Come to peace with the fact that you wonât know every single word on the GRE now to save yourself a minor freakout when youâre actually taking the exam. The best way to deal with Text Completion questions is to use process of elimination. Letâs take a look at one: Perhaps you are looking at the answer choices for the first blank and donât know what âmaladroitnessâ means. You can still make a confident decision about whether the other choices do or donât work. Based on the context, we know we want a word that suggests nature sets an example to follow. We can eliminate quirkiness because that has nothing to do with an example to follow, and keep preeminence. Does âpreeminenceâ work in that blank? It absolutely does. If you have to choose between a good answer and one you didnât understand, choose the good one. If nothing good remains, choose the one you donât understand. If itâs a toss up, choose the one you donât understand since that may just be the best one after all. Donât avoid an answer choice simply because you donât know the vocab. About the Author Mike S. is one of our most experienced test prep tutors. For more information on our GRE prep packages, click here.
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