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GRE Psychology – Testing What You’ve Learned in College

beautiful asian girl thinking about the GRE TestOnce it comes time to prepare for the GRE Psychology, it may have been several years since you reviewed information on differences between Freudian and Jungian psychology. Maybe you’re even a returning student with hopes to go back and get your masters or Ph.D. What you have in common is the need to brush up on your psychological knowledge base to score highly on the GRE Psychology Subject Test. Lucky for you – Help is right here. There are a couple of methods that I advise for test-taking:

1. Invest in a good professional guide.

There are many excellent guides to the GRE Psychology in the marketplace. Act like a savvy consumer when making a purchase: Take a moment to peruse the actual content, read the customer reviews, and then use your judgment to choose the best one. One great technological advantage is the ability to search for and compare and contrast titles online.

2. Identify your strength and weaknesses.

Flip immediately to the back of the book and take out your pencil and paper for the practice exam. Usually there are at least two practice exams included – use one for a pretest, the other for the post test. Once you finish scoring, it will be immediately apparent which areas you need extra review. Are you answering lots of research methods/statistics questions incorrectly? Do you barely remember anything from your 8 am Developmental Psychology course (and it shows through your score)? Identify your weakness, find the appropriate section of the book, and study up!

3. Review test-taking strategy.

Even though the GRE Psychology tests for specific, focused knowledge learned from your undergraduate courses, make no mistake, this is still a standardized test and adopting effective test-taking tips will have a positive impact on your score. One of the advantages of using a professional guide is review of test-taking strategies. Learn whether or not it’s advantageous to just guess or leave a question blank (hint: this strategy depends on the actual scoring system) or how to avoid common “trick answers” planted to determine if you really know your stuff about psychology.

If this has been helpful and you’d like to learn more, please visit: Get into grad school

Visit the definitive source for information on applying to Ph.D. programs in psychology: Applying to graduate school

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Sheridan_Salter

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