The Smart Student's Guide to the GRE Literature in English Test

Most English majors who take the GRE Literature in English test do not do particularly well, usually near the 50th percentile. To increase their acceptance into a graduate program (MA or PhD), test takers need at least to be over the 80th percentile. This is hard to do since ETS deliberately designs the test to befuddle most test takers. Quite frankly, these test takers simply do not know enough literature to excel. Further, they do not have the test "psyched" out, and they are lacking effective test taking strategies. This latest in the Smart Student's Guide series will tell test takers exactly what authors and texts are likely to be covered. Included are comprehensive summaries of individual poems, novels, short stories, plays, myth, non-fiction prose, and detailed summaries of the major schools of literary theory. For those who feel weak in Shakespeare, Chaucer, African-American literature, and technical literary terms, there are separate chapters for each. There is also a detailed summary of the history of British and American literature. This book also contains a chapter that no other test prep book has--a Phrase Name Matching that immediately links a phrase to a specific author or text, thus freeing you from actually reading the passage; you simply know the correct answer. You also are given an overall strategy to score high. ETS does not even hint at this. Plan to spend three to six months of intensive prep time and you too can hit or exceed the 80th percentile. I cannot guarantee that you will have a very high score, but if you read this book carefully, you will be as well prepared as you can.

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The Smart Student's Guide to the GRE Literature in English Test

Most English majors who take the GRE Literature in English test do not do particularly well, usually near the 50th percentile. To increase their acceptance into a graduate program (MA or PhD), test takers need at least to be over the 80th percentile. This is hard to do since ETS deliberately designs the test to befuddle most test takers. Quite frankly, these test takers simply do not know enough literature to excel. Further, they do not have the test "psyched" out, and they are lacking effective test taking strategies. This latest in the Smart Student's Guide series will tell test takers exactly what authors and texts are likely to be covered. Included are comprehensive summaries of individual poems, novels, short stories, plays, myth, non-fiction prose, and detailed summaries of the major schools of literary theory. For those who feel weak in Shakespeare, Chaucer, African-American literature, and technical literary terms, there are separate chapters for each. There is also a detailed summary of the history of British and American literature. This book also contains a chapter that no other test prep book has--a Phrase Name Matching that immediately links a phrase to a specific author or text, thus freeing you from actually reading the passage; you simply know the correct answer. You also are given an overall strategy to score high. ETS does not even hint at this. Plan to spend three to six months of intensive prep time and you too can hit or exceed the 80th percentile. I cannot guarantee that you will have a very high score, but if you read this book carefully, you will be as well prepared as you can.

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The Smart Student's Guide to the GRE Literature in English Test

The Smart Student's Guide to the GRE Literature in English Test

by Martin Asiner
The Smart Student's Guide to the GRE Literature in English Test

The Smart Student's Guide to the GRE Literature in English Test

by Martin Asiner

eBook

$6.99 

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Overview

Most English majors who take the GRE Literature in English test do not do particularly well, usually near the 50th percentile. To increase their acceptance into a graduate program (MA or PhD), test takers need at least to be over the 80th percentile. This is hard to do since ETS deliberately designs the test to befuddle most test takers. Quite frankly, these test takers simply do not know enough literature to excel. Further, they do not have the test "psyched" out, and they are lacking effective test taking strategies. This latest in the Smart Student's Guide series will tell test takers exactly what authors and texts are likely to be covered. Included are comprehensive summaries of individual poems, novels, short stories, plays, myth, non-fiction prose, and detailed summaries of the major schools of literary theory. For those who feel weak in Shakespeare, Chaucer, African-American literature, and technical literary terms, there are separate chapters for each. There is also a detailed summary of the history of British and American literature. This book also contains a chapter that no other test prep book has--a Phrase Name Matching that immediately links a phrase to a specific author or text, thus freeing you from actually reading the passage; you simply know the correct answer. You also are given an overall strategy to score high. ETS does not even hint at this. Plan to spend three to six months of intensive prep time and you too can hit or exceed the 80th percentile. I cannot guarantee that you will have a very high score, but if you read this book carefully, you will be as well prepared as you can.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940044806597
Publisher: Martin Asiner
Publication date: 06/27/2012
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 524 KB

About the Author

I have a B.S. in Business, an M.A. in English Literature, and an M.S. in Computer Science. For twenty two years I was an Adjunct Professor of English at a community college in New Jersey. I have more than thirty years experience as a high school Language Arts instructor. My hobbies include reviewing books on literary theory and criticism on Amazon.

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