[quote name='PleasantOne']Ooo! Ooo! Another Psych person... how was the Psychology GRE? Someone told me if I just review a general psychology book, I should do fine?
And JEKKI, I find that a lot of the GRE vocab stuff I've found online has been like that. It pisses me off that people are pushing this stuff as legitimate study material.
Someone told me they used a program that had the whole databse of GRE words, and you could create crossword puzzles, matching, etc. They said it was from REA, but the only thing I can find from them is the book with CD - no idea if that particular software is on it or not.
I think I'm most freaked out by how few questions there are... so much is riding on every answer

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Yea it really depends on what you're into and what you're good at. See, my forte has always been humanities and social sciences. Psychology is one of my majors.. but I've also done really well in sociology, English, history, and philosophy classes. I've never done very well in math or science classes. Typical, huh?
Also, I've been working in an undergraduate research laboratory (studying addiction) for about 2 years now, so I'm very familiar with the way psychological testing and article publishing works. I'm fairly adept with EndNote, SPSS, and some of the other tools of the trade.
Basically, if you know your psychology, you'll do well on the Psychology GRE. And if you know a bunch of useless math and obscure vocabulary words that you'll never use, you'll do well on the regular GRE.
By the way, about the testing logistics of the GRE... it's not the best criterion construct for success in graduate school. The GRE is basically a stupid filter test used by admissions boards to weed out people they feel are "sub-par". As long as you get an acceptable score on it, your actual score is fairly irrelevant. This is what matters:
- your GPA
- what classes you've taken, make sure you take some complex psyc classes such as experimental design, psychological testing, and whatever requirements fill your concentration (if you have one)
- research experience
- work experience
That is all.