ayankgp Posted November 11, 2012 Posted November 11, 2012 I just came from my chemistry subject GRE test and would like to share the experience. PREPARATION: I solved the old GRE papers : 1995, 2000 and 2006. These were actually most helpful. The level of questions became easier with time. The test I took was really similar to the 2006 paper. Apart from these I solved the REA GRE Chmistry Practice Book. Here the topics were quite similar but there were many errors. My advice is to thoroughly study the 3 old papers as many times possible. The questions asked were the same concepts in different forms. Once done you can identify your weak areas and then study them from some source. SOME QUESTIONS: The organic questions were fairly simple and were all from the same topics and reactions as in the old papers(aldol, grignard, markovnikoff addition, etc.). The physical chemistry questions also encompassed similar formulae and concepts as previous years(ionic strength, ionic equilibrium questions from Henderson-Hasselbach equation, neutralisation of weak acid and strong base), there was analytical questions(few) from gravimetry and reverse HPLC (simple and direct). There were many biochem questions (amino acids, function of enzymes, carbohydrates, proteins). Some exact questions were: 1. Identify the alkaloid : A. The one with Nitrogen in the aromatic ring 2. Which of the following will have highest density? ((Na,Al,Co,Si) A. Co 3. Which group will have most elements in liquid state at 100 degree C and 1 bar pressure? A. Alkali metals 4. end product of glycolysis? A. pyruvic acid 5. NMR question to identify the compound from peaks ADVICE: I prepared in less than 2 weeks. The main thing is to know the pattern and prepare all the topics from which questions have been asked in previous gre exams.
an11 Posted December 13, 2012 Posted December 13, 2012 Hi... it was interesting reading about your experience and that was pretty sound advice! Could you share how much you scored on your Chemistry sub GRE?
SymmetryOfImperfection Posted December 14, 2012 Posted December 14, 2012 thank you... was this: 2. Which of the following will have highest density? ((Na,Al,Co,Si) A. Co a real question??? are you supposed to just "know" that transition metals are less dense than group 1/3 metals and semiconductors?
nipwe Posted January 28, 2013 Posted January 28, 2013 Hi Ayankgp, Can you send me those Chemistry GRE past papers if you don't mind ? My e-mail is nipuna_2004@yahoo.com
Nyx1801 Posted February 6, 2013 Posted February 6, 2013 Hi!! Could you please tell me where u found the past gre tests?? I am studying for 2014 and I am worried I'm not getting enough practice. Thank you!!!
osooliz Posted March 19, 2013 Posted March 19, 2013 Can you send me those Chemistry GRE past papers if you don't mind ? my email is osooliz@yahoo.com
hydrocrackerman Posted March 22, 2013 Posted March 22, 2013 Hi, guys! Let's trade GRE Practice Exams/Reviewers. kindly email me at hydrocrackerman [at] yahoo.com Thanks!
Nyx1801 Posted March 28, 2013 Posted March 28, 2013 Could you pleaaaaase send me too!!!?? sunichka@gmail.com
gish88 Posted May 25, 2013 Posted May 25, 2013 Could you send me those exams as well? gwcgish@gmail.com aberrant 1
ayankgp Posted October 17, 2013 Author Posted October 17, 2013 For the question on highest density....just remember that Fe, Co, Ni have similar properties. Also Fe is much denser than most other group elements. For the papers search GR9527, GR0027 and GR0627. They are available online if you search.
ayankgp Posted October 17, 2013 Author Posted October 17, 2013 Hi... it was interesting reading about your experience and that was pretty sound advice! Could you share how much you scored on your Chemistry sub GRE? I got 830 scaled score and a percentile of 83%.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now