GRE Test Dates in Florida
Register via web, phone or mail
The GRE General Test is offered as a computer-based test in the United States, Canada and many other countries. Paper-based General Test administrations are offered in areas of the world where computer-based testing is not available.
Appointments are scheduled on a first-come, first-served basis. Register early to get your preferred test date.
There are three ways to register for the computer-based GRE General Test in the USA, US Territory, or Canada:
Web: Online Registration
Phone: Call the test center directly or the Prometric Call Center at 1-443-751-4820 or 1-800-GRE-CALL (1-800-473-2255).
Mail: Download and complete the Authorization Voucher Request Form (PDF) found in the Bulletin.
What is the GRE?
The GRE (Graduate Record Examination) is required for admission to most graduate programs in natural sciences, engineering, social sciences, humanities, education, and other fields. If you are applying to law, business, or med school, you don't need the GRE because each of these schools has its own test:
Law school = LSAT
Business school = GMAT
Med school = MCAT
However, there is a growing trend for business schools to accept either the GMAT or the GRE.
The GRE actually consists of two separate tests:
General Test
Subject Tests
The GRE General Test, also referred to as the GRE revised General Test to reflect changes effected in August 2011, measures verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, critical thinking, and analytical writing skills – unrelated to any specific field of study.
The GRE Subject Tests gauge undergraduate achievement in eight specific fields of study and can help forecast a candidate's potential for success in graduate school. Not all graduate schools require a Subject Test. Each Subject Test is intended for students who have majored in or have extensive background in that specific area:
Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology
Biology
Chemistry
Computer Science
Literature in English
Mathematics
Physics
Psychology
For students still in college and not quite sure yet what they want to do, taking the GRE is a superb idea. It's like having an insurance policy for your future – especially in today's uncertain economy. Now more than ever, you need every advantage to get a job, and keep it. In fact, as of March 2009, there were 30% fewer unemployed advanced degree holders than those with just a bachelor's degree. So, keep your options open while you're still in a test-taking frame of mind: register and prepare for the GRE!
The GRE revised General Test is a 3-hour computer-based test given in the United States, Canada, and many other countries. Paper-based tests are offered in parts of the world where computer-based testing is not available. The Subject Tests are paper-based and last 2 hours and 50 minutes.
How is the GRE revised General Test organized and scored?
The Computer-Based GRE
The Analytical Writing section is always first, while the other five sections may appear in any order.
Analytical Writing
(One section with two separately timed tasks)
"Analyze an Issue" task
"Analyze an Argument" task
30 minutes/task
Verbal Reasoning
(Two sections)
Approximately 20 questions/section
30 minutes/section
Quantitative Reasoning
(Two sections)
Approximately
20 questions/section
35 minutes/section
Unscored Section
Typically a Verbal Reasoning or
Quantitative Reasoning section
Time Varies
An identified research section that is not scored may also be included in the computer-based GRE revised General Test.
There is a 10-minute break following the third section and a 1-minute break between the other test sections.
The revised Verbal Reasoning contains three types of questions:
Reading Comprehension
Text Completion
Sentence Equivalence
The revised Quantitative Reasoning section contains four types of questions:
Multiple-choice questions – select one answer choice
Multiple-choice questions – select one or more answer choices
Grid-in questions
Quantitative Comparison questions
Each math question appears either independently as a discrete question or as part of a set of questions called a Data Interpretation set. All of the questions in a Data Interpretation set are based on the same data presented in tables, graphs or other displays of data. Math questions are surprisingly similar to those on the SAT and are taken from the following content areas:
Arithmetic
Algebra
Geometry
Data Analysis
The Paper-Based GRE
Analytical Writing
(One section with
two separately timed tasks)
"Analyze an Issue" task
"Analyze an Argument" task
30 minutes/task
Verbal Reasoning
(Two sections)
25 questions/section
35 minutes/section
Quantitative Reasoning
(Two sections)
25 questions/section
40 minutes/section
Scoring
The verbal and the quantitative tests each yield a separate score in the 130-170 range (in 1-point increments). Scores on the analytical writing test are reported in ½-point increments along a scale of 0 to 6. The Subject Tests yield scores from 200 to 990. Admission to graduate school will typically depend more on the verbal and quantitative scores than on a Subject Test score. It is essential that test-takers do well to get into most doctoral programs; master's programs are less competitive.