It depends on your intended field of study at the graduate level.
Humanities disciplines don't care about your math score, but they will expect very strong verbal and writing scores.
Scientific disciplines only expect a decent (500s) verbal score, but they will expect you to score extremely well in the quantitative section.
Focus on what will get you where you want to go.
2007-05-07 17:49:21
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answer #1
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answered by X 7
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It's kind of complicated because it depends on how strong you are in each area. If you're strong in math, spend more time on verbal. For me, I found that simply reading through a review book, not too strenuously, about a couple weeks beforehand was more than enough. The vocab, however was a different story. I would suggest getting a review book. In them, they will have a list of the top 200-300 GRE vocab words. Make flash cards. Every night, go over 5-10 of them. The next night, review the previous ones, and learn a few more. That way, every night you're reviewing the old ones and learning new ones. It might take a little time, but as you go along, you should be able to go through the older cards pretty quickly, so probably about a half hour a night would be enough.
Anther option is to learn the list of prefixes and suffixes, so you can guess at teh meaning of a word if you don't know it. That may or may not work though, depending on how you think and your ability to reason quickly.
The math is more a matter of getting used to the types of questions they ask. Get a review book, look it over, and spend time on the sections you aren't familiar with. Keep a notebook, and write down the things you don't nkow as you go along. Then, a week or two before the test, review your notebook. That way, it will be fresh in your mind, but you will still have spent some time studying beforehand so it's not so overwhelming.
2007-05-07 07:51:17
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answer #2
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answered by Adela000 2
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I just walked in and took it cold -- so I may not be the best person to talk to about this.
However, I've been studying for the CFA exams & the way I do it is to just take practice exams over & over. After each one, I look at the results. They tell me what areas I know perfectly and what areas I need to study. I look at the ones I got wrong, and find out why I got them wrong. Then I take another practice exam.
2007-05-07 07:34:51
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answer #3
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answered by Ranto 7
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Maths. track is a exhilaration i don't prefer to hazard spoiling, Mythology isn't probable my ingredient and advertising and marketing is evil. So Maths. it is an engaging subject,, i'm purely uncertain that my innovations could be sufficiently enormous.
2016-10-15 00:39:11
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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