jesse7771 Posted October 15, 2013 Posted October 15, 2013 Hi, Im currently an undergraduate in electrical engineering looking to pursue a masters/PHD in EE or related field. I'm at a top 90 institution in my Sr. year with almost all of my major done. Right now Im sitting at a 3.8 overall 4.0 major GPA and I recently took my GRE. Didnt have time to study or prep aside from the day before (COOP, Sr. Design, research, really long commutes every day...) and got a 163 Quant 164 Verbal. Im wondering if it would be worth it for me to retake the test or not? Its not a cheap test to take and I plan on applying to grad school this December so if I do retake it will be very hard for me to find enough time to prep, Im worried about the low Quant score... I plan on applying to several schools like Ga. Tech, Cornell, UF, UCSD, Purdue, Michigan, ect.
Phdseeking14 Posted October 16, 2013 Posted October 16, 2013 Dear Jesse7771, I think your GRE scores are good; most schools have started to care very little about them (based on language on many admissions pages of schools), some even eliminating them alltogether (e.g., MIT). For PhD, the consensus seems to be that GPA, letters of recommendation, and most importantly research, as demonstrated by letters, experience and publications, is what matters. I think your time will be better spent trying to beef up research activities. Just my 2 cents. Best wishes, -DV
TexasGuy Posted October 26, 2013 Posted October 26, 2013 are you joking? YES...retake it. your scores are horrible. myoranges 1
budgie Posted October 31, 2013 Posted October 31, 2013 I got into most schools I applied to with worse GRE scores than yours. So long as you've got good research experience under your belt (and good LORs from that), with a gpa like yours, I think you'll be fine
gungun1010 Posted November 10, 2013 Posted November 10, 2013 are you joking? YES...retake it. your scores are horrible. stop trolling ppl . ppl here are worried and looking for real comments...
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