新GRE考试流程具体介绍「干货」 还没有考过GRE考试的呢一定很想了解一下GRE考试的流程吧!下面是YJBYS小编为大家收集的关于新GRE考试流程具体介绍,欢迎大家阅读借鉴! GRE考试包括三部分: 第一部分为分析性写作部分(Analytical Writing),时间为两小时。该部分包括……
新GRE考试流程具体介绍「干货」
还没有考过GRE考试的呢一定很想了解一下GRE考试的流程吧!下面是YJBYS小编为大家收集的关于新GRE考试流程具体介绍,欢迎大家阅读借鉴!
GRE考试包括三部分:
第一部分为分析性写作部分(Analytical Writing),时间为两小时。该部分包括两个任务,分别要求应试者对一个问题发表个人的观点(Issue Task)和分析一个论点(Argument Task)。
第二部分为词汇(Verbal)部分。该部分内容很广泛,涉及天文、地理、人文、科学、艺术、政治及历史等领域;
第三部分为数学(Quantitative)部分。该部分皆为数理上的基本问题,包括几何、代数、统计图表、智力测验等方面,主要目的在于测验考生基本数学的潜在能力和对数理方面问题的理解判断及推理反应能力。题目难易和深浅程度,有时取决于考生对于题目叙述与说明的理解。
新GRE改革后考试时间为一次考完,3个半小时,中间有时间简短休息,改革后新GRE每月有两次考试机会。
考试流程具体如下:
1. 进入考场
a) 9点半到达考场,先进等候室,把你的证件和确认信给监考老师看,然后监考老师给你一份协议书和一把储物箱的钥匙,要用黑色签字笔填写协议书,自己没带可以找监考人员要。协议内容仍然是Confidentiality Agreement与个人信息,这一点与旧GRE考试的AW作文部分的'机考完全类似。填完协议书锁好自己的物品之后就可以排队进考场了,此时你的手上拿着 两个东西,一个是协议书,另外一个是身份证(确认信自己放包里面,不带进考场)。
b) 排队进入考场,先张开手臂接受安检,然后进入一个房间照相,照完相才会告诉你考位号,把协议书放在照相的监考人员那儿,此时你全身上下就只剩一张身份证,然后拿着身份证进入考场找到自己的考位坐下即可。
2. 开始考试
a) 进入考场之后,面前的计算机界面不是ETS官方模考软件的第一个界面,而是有个人信息的check界面,还需要输入开始密码。这些部分监考老师都会协助你完成,所以无需担心。
b) 开始进入考试界面之后,与官方模考软件的界面基本类似,直接各种continue就行了。需要注意的一点是,在 正式开始之前会有一个送分学校的选择过程,同旧GRE的作文机考一致,需要事先记好你申请的专业院系和学校名称以及学校位于美国的哪个州。
c) 选好送分学校之后进入正式答题的界面仍然与模考软件大致相同。首先第一个section一定是Analytical Writing部分,先是issue然后是argument,各30分钟。其中,在每个section之间都有1分钟的休息时间,在第3、4个section之间有10分钟的休息时间,是否选择休息由考生个人决定。
d) 在第三个section做完之后,会出现一个选择界面,如果你想休息10分钟,那就点击选择休息,然后监考人员会过来领你出考场休息。
鉴于总是有考生不断问到这10分钟休息到底做什么?
笔者有如下建议:
首先,鉴于整场考试长达近4个小时,不在中间休息是很不利于自己的生理和心理的,建议各位考生选择休息;
其次,休息的这10分钟,你虽然出了考场,但是要问清楚监考老师哪些事情可以做,哪些事情不可以做。一般考生可能会做的是拿钥匙打开储物箱拿点吃的东西补充一下能量,以及去洗手间,这两种行为基本无可厚非的。除此之外的事情,你需要和监考老师打招呼得到其认可才能去做。
GRE考前必看填空题
1.Common and easily accessible resources (prey for predators or hosts for parasites) should be, all other things being equal, used frequently (Jaenike 1990). Still, some apparently accessible and suitable resources remain ________.
2.Precedent ______ judicial restraint and ______ a judge's ability to determine the outcome of a case in a way that he or she might choose if there were no precedent. This function of precedent gives it its moral force.
3.To pay for the extra spending, each American would have to contribute less than the cost of buying a cappuccino from Starbucks once a week. Aid is not a _______, and, even if the funding Sachs wants were to ________, his grandest objectives may well remain unfulfilled. But, targeted carefully, aid can reward responsible governments, _______ individual initiative, and alleviate suffering. Surely that’s worth a cup of coffee.
4.Dadaism, the to-hell-with-art art movement that began in Zurich nearly a century ago, is the subject of a rivetingly lucid exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in Washington. The show is nothing if not _______, for the visual arts are currently awash in Dadaist gestures and gambits of one variety or another.
5.Our mass media are much more fascinated by bad ideas or the failure of good ones than by successes: we drown in bad news—tales of how things went wrong—but we have only the most ______ discussion on how they might go right.
6.A significant element of the Gothic mode, the literary grotesque--which includes incongruous, abnormal, "monstrous" characters, situations, and events--is sometimes discussed, especially within the American literary tradition, as if it were ___________ Gothic or, conversely, as if it were something entirely different from Gothic.
7.To that end, the municipal Traffic Planning Department here in Zurich has been working overtime in recent years to _______ drivers. Closely spaced red lights have been added on roads into town, causing delays and angst for commuters. Pedestrian underpasses that once allowed traffic to flow freely across major intersections have been ________.
8.When pulsars were first discovered there was a brief moment when astro-physicists in the discovery team(Jocelyn Bell and Anthony Hewish at Cambridge University) _______ they had ___________ extraterrestrial intelligence. The periodic nature of the pulsar radiation pattern was seen to be a possible _________ rather than the product of a spinning neutron star.
9.There is no way to listen to the string quartets of Shostakovich and not wonder about their external meanings. In the Western art music tradition, the string quartet genre has been celebrated for its rigor and coherence. But this Soviet composer, whose reputation has been wrestled over almost since his death in 1975, gave us string quartets ________.
10. their quest for kinder cutting, physicians increasingly rely on endoscopic surgery, replacing large scalpels and clamps with cameras and ______ tools that snake into the body through tiny holes.
11.According to some political analysts, the candidate's occasionally rambling response to questions suggest that he has been out of circulation for a while and his debating skills need to be __________.
12.As ordinary photography moves into the digital realm-as we replace atoms with bits by recording images in binary code-family albums will last forever. Home videos, unless lost or destroyed, will be _______ too. Our capacity to store them in the microscopic world of silicon chips and magnetic and optical disks is, for all practical purposes, approaching the infinite. I’m not sure we’re ready for such a transformation. In life as we have known it, old photos fade and crumble, and boxes of them, along with albums, slides, and reels of family movies, disintegrate and are eventually _______. Only a few precious mementos are preserved, perhaps restored, and passed along. The natural world teaches us that _______ are vital to ecological health.
13.But opinions diverge on whether the diverse and often unexpected phenomena that can occur in systems more complex than individual particles truly represent new physical principles at work, or whether the principles involved are _______, relying, albeit in a terribly complicated way, on the physical principles governing the enormously large number of elementary constituents.
14. Wolves, it seems, leaven their otherwise strongly hierarchical society with occasional displays of populist _______, and if a pack leader proves a too-snappish tyrant, subordinate wolves will _________the top cur.
15.The central idea of Wilson’s consilience world-view is that “all tangible phenomena, from the birth of stars to the workings of social institutions, are based on material processes that are ultimately reducible, however long and _______ the sequences, to the laws of physics.
16.It can be _______ to read Margaret Fuller’s travel writing, as she produced accounts of her travel that________conventions of bourgeois travel narrative, often capitulating to the most well-worn clichés of the genre at precisely the moments when she sought most energetically to cast them off in favor of some new, more passionate mode of discernment.
17.But because archaeology addresses the most basic questions and explores the most profound changes in human history by means of a grossly incomplete record—and perhaps because it was long the province of aristocrats and buccaneers—it has invited the sort of bold interpretations in which speculation can too easily become ________ evidence.
18.Evolutionary psychologists are not as imperialist in their ambitions as their sociobiologist forebears of the nineteen-seventies, but they tend to be no less _______ in their claims.
19.To function as an _______, the critic needs, above all else, to write well. A badly written book review is worse than a badly written political speech or greeting card or poem; a badly written review is _________, like a barber with a terrible haircut. The best way to establish critical authority is to demonstrate, in your own prose, a vitality at least equivalent to that of the book you’re writing about. There are other ways to do it, but that’s the most immediately convincing.
20.campus-wide discussions on academic integrity can be _______ by the fact that faculty and students tend to define cheating in ______ ways (Kidwell, Wozniak, & Laurel, 2003; Nuss, 1984; Pincus & Schmelkin, 2003; Stern & Havlicek, 1986). Even when they concur on what cheating means, faculty and students often assign different levels of severity to specific violations (Pincus & Schmelkin, 2003). These disparities can lead to the creation of a "we versus they mentality" (Kidwell et al., 2003: 213) and so, serve as a major __________ the creation of a commonly accepted set of standards of integrity that are consistently applied to all academic work within the campus community.
21.But scenes of bustling streets and well-dressed Congolese going about their business ______ the growing hardship faced by all but the richest local residents, or Kinois.
更多相关文章推荐:
1.2017年新GRE考试
2.新GRE考试详细介绍
3.GRE考试流程详细介绍
4.新GRE考试词汇汇总
5.2017年新GRE考试结构及内容
6.GRE退考与转考流程
7.2017gre考试时间【具体】
8.2017GRE考试报名流程及注意事项
9.GRE口语与写作情况介绍
10.gre考试内容和形式介绍