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bigant

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  1. There's also a writing course on Coursera on 'writing in the sciences', by Stanford. Surely ETS will wake up and smell the coffee?
  2. Even Stanford knows there's a problem with scholarly writing, that's why they have courses on how to improve writing: http://www.stanford....ng/lecture1.ppt http://lane.stanford.edu/classes-consult/laneclass.html?class-id=122
  3. bigant

    GRE Advice

    I think the scores have to be average at the very least, because you can then make up in other areas. With a low score, the job becomes that much more difficult, unless you can prove genius levels of achievement that over-rides everything else.
  4. The scores etc may not stand in your way, if you've already done some interesting work in the areas you mention, ie prove your interest. If you haven't done any work, find out the research interests of the professors at the universities you seek admission for, and find someone whose interests matches yours. Then go off and do some related reading, thinking and if possible, research. Write up this research, and use it in your application. Show how the PhD will further your own research interests, and that of your professor(s).
  5. Agreed. However, in terms of “realistic testing”, there is not a single text book, paper or anything that I have read (or will read in graduate school) that does not have a title or heading, telling you what the material is about. At the very minimum, and in the interest of source attribution, the passages should have a statement that says, eg "The following passage has been extracted from the paper "The revival of European folk music in the 17th century." This still does not excuse the badly written passages. To use a rather loose analogy, you cannot say the user of a Microsoft-based PC is superior to someone who uses an Apple, just because Apple's user interface (UI) is "easier" to use. Agreed that if a place has only Microsoft-based computers, they would want to test you on those computers. If Apple users don’t do well on the test, this doesn't mean Apple users are stupid or aren’t qualified to use computers at all. In the old days, Microsoft had text-based (MS DOS) UI, and Apple had a graphical UI. Apple’s UI would’ve meant far higher productivity, and that’s why Microsoft had to come up with Windows.
  6. Brick has shown that the original sentence is also needlessly complex, by editing it: "The increase in the numbers of married women employed outside the home in the twentieth century had less to do with the mechanization of housework and an increase in leisure time for these women than it did with their owneconomic necessity and with high marriage rates that shrank the available pool of single women workers, previously, in many cases, the only women employers would hire." It's a matter of opinion whether or not a passage is unnecessarily complex. ETS needs to lay down some baseline standards for scholarly writing used in passages, because many "scholarly" writers are not trained in writing (as opposed to being literate) and write however they want, without any regard to clarity.
  7. The Introduction to the Analytical Writing Section of the GRE® revised General Test (Page 8, The form of your response, para 2, last sentence) says : "What matters is not the number of examples, the number of paragraphs, or the form your argument takes but, rather, the cogency of your ideas about the issue and the clarity and skill with which you communicate those ideas to academic readers." Clarity matters if it's the candidate doing the writing. But if it's GRE passage writing, clarity does not matter? A case of double standards. Here's brick's modified "sentence" again: "The lack of a decrease, and even the lack of a maintenance of a steady state, in the numbers of non-single women employed outside the home in the twentieth century had less to do with the proliferation of electrical appliances throughout homes in the Western world, a decrease in the amount of time required to do household work -- which typically belonged to the distaff's side -- and an increase in leisure time than it did with their perception of economic need and with the fact that fewer women were remaining single, a phenomenon that shrank the availability of employers' previously-relied-upon pool of single women workers, which were often the only women those employers would hire." Since "the meaning is there", I'm sure the highly educated examiners could figure out the meaning, had I written such a sentence in a test. What are the chances that I'd get a good score?
  8. Take one item for now: passage titles. Presumably, ETS's experimental tests have not included passage titles. Is there testing research that proves that passage titles negatively co-relate with graduate study success?
  9. Why call it a reading comprehension test then? I agree with your point about correlation, but then ETS would have to admit that it's not really a reading comprehension test.
  10. Perfectly put, finknottle!
  11. The idea behind a research statement is actually a research question - you ask a question about a specific issue, and your research project answers that question. For example, "Why do cats chase rats?" The idea is also to pick a research question that hasn't been asked before, and for that, you will have to do some research. To maximize your chances of admission, look up the research interests of the professors at your chosen university (which you should find on their website), and choose topics that fit THEIR interests, ie don't pick a topic that interests only you. There should be a match between what you want and what your future advisor will want.
  12. It would be great if we could get someone from ETS to confirm that it is NOT the aim of the passages to communicate. Anybody know anybody at ETS?
  13. Ok, so what I'm hearing is that the passages should NOT clearly communicate, but deliberately obfuscate (eg by removal of headlines, usage of long-winded sentences etc)?
  14. With due respect to KitKat, the purpose of a headline is not ONLY to help you choose which article to read. Even if you are reading a single article, a headline is still useful and necessary.
  15. The point I am making is, papers have titles, and titles help in comprehension (otherwise, why would titles be used?). So it is not fair to deprive test candidates of titles, even for excerpts.
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