Schools Finishing your graduate school application early vs. general GRE score

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around the importance of the GRE verbal section and the timing of graduate school applications. It is suggested that while the verbal GRE is important, it may not be critical if the applicant can demonstrate strong writing skills through a personal statement. A week of focused study for the verbal section is deemed sufficient rather than an entire month. The conversation also touches on the relevance of application deadlines, with some participants noting that submitting applications by the deadline is generally acceptable and that schools may not prioritize early submissions. Additionally, there is a mention of specific programs, like applied physics, where certain GRE requirements may be waived based on the applicant's focus, such as materials science. The discussion concludes with questions about acceptable GRE scores and the potential impact of the applicant's educational background in Jordan on their application.
alemsalem
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Hi :)
i can finish my application by mid September but i will not have enough time to prepare for the verbal section of the GRE, how important is it? should i take an extra month to prepare for it ?
how important is finishing an application early for graduate schools?
some schools don't look at your application until it's all done, could i finish everything else and do the general GRE later??

thank you
 
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I submitted pretty much all my applications on the deadline. It turned out fine. I don't really see why schools would care about that, what's the point of a deadline if they don't want you to use it? haha

I wouldn't worry about the verbal GRE too much. I mean you don't want to bomb it. But if you can write a really good personal statement that shows you can write well, then it seems to me that covers the important part of your verbal ability anyway.
 
You should not spend a month studying for the verbal part of the GRE. I would say a week of occasional studying is appropriate; it is what I did. I am starting grad school in the fall. The important thing is the PGRE, which I imagine you already know.
 
It's a funny loophole, at some schools you can be accepted into an applied physics program without taking the physics GRE, if you are claiming to be interested in materials science. Materials science comes in the applied physics department, but since matsci's haven't done much physics, they can't expect you to take the exam. Obviously once you're in the department you're no different than anyone else though.
 
yeah i think it's not all that important, but how much is enough should it be more than 500 or 400.
 
yeah i think it's not all that important,, but how much should be above 400, 500 hundred i guess that's how much i might get,, I'm an American-Jordanian i studied physics in Jordan does that count for something??
 
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