September 2022

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
181920 21222324
2526 27282930 

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Friday, November 17th, 2006 01:52 am
I just took the GRE again, just about exactly 7 years after the last time I took it. I miss the old analytical section, with all the constraint-based logic problems. Those were fun. Now you have to do 2 written sections instead. Not nearly as much fun, and you don't get the results back from those for weeks.

Part of the sign-in procedure is copying out this paragraph of 'I will not cheat or tell anyone about the contents of the test'. By hand. In cursive. Yes, they actually specific cursive. I have no idea what the legal standing of cursive is, but blah. Who uses cursive anymore? Do they still teach it to kids? What a waste of time. Nothing like starting an important test with a hand cramp.

For those of you who haven't taken it in the last 10 years, it's on a computer now. Which is nice, because the questions are adaptive -- correct answers mean you get harder questions, which means the test is more accurate at the extreme ends of the scale. You also get some of the results back immediately. But the computers they use are absolute crap Compaqs, several years old, with not-completely-clean mechanical mice. And the refresh rate was set to 60Hz, aaaaaaaa. I asked if that could be changed, and they gave me a glare filter. Which did help a bit, but no more than turning down the brightness would have. Bah. I'm all for using new technology, but use it in ways that doesn't make my eyeballs twist inside-out, kthx.

End result: I am extremely well-rounded. Or at least the non-analytical 2/3 of me is.
Friday, November 17th, 2006 05:03 am (UTC)
I wonder if there has ever been any challenge to the "cursive" requirement--like you say, what's the legal standard for cursive? I don't recall it from when I took the GRE.

I mean, since when is that a legally required skill?

Only write a handful of things in cursive anymore--all of them having to do with old-style security. Although it is arguably much faster, engineering school completely broke me of it, and now I only write in all block caps. (Well, approximately.)

BTW, did you take a subject-specific or just the general? And I hate the abstract logic puzzles.

-B.
Friday, November 17th, 2006 05:19 am (UTC)
I was at the Thompson Testing Center up in Mountlake Terrace. Not the most aesthetic of places, no.

I only do the blocks-caps thing as well, and even that it getting extremely rare. The shopping list and credit card slips are the only things I write out by hand any more.

This was the general test. Not many CS departments care about the subject test.