The Math Beast Challenge Problem of the Week – July 8, 2013
If xy ≠0 and y is the arithmetic inverse of x, what is the ratio of to ?
Free GRE Events This Week: July 8- July 14
Here are the free GRE events we’re holding this week (All times local unless otherwise specified):
7/11/13– New York, NY- Free Trial Class– 6:30PM – 9:30PM
7/13/13– New York, NY- Free Trial Class– 10:00AM – 1:00PM
Looking for more free events? Check out our Free Events Listing Page.
Friday Links: Online Graduate Classes, Productivity Tools, & More!
Happy Friday and happy Fourth of July Weekend! Here’s our weekly roundup of grad school news and tips:
Leverage International Roots for U.S. Grad School Applications (U.S. News Education)
Emphasizing cultural differences is a natural way prospective international graduate students can craft unique applications.
What is an Online Graduate Class Like? (About.com Graduate School)
Online classes hold some similarities with traditional on-ground courses, but there are also many differences.
6 Important Things Nobody Tells You About Grad School (Cracked)
If you’re considering or already in postgrad work, take some helpful advice from someone who already has two and a half postgraduate degrees under his belt.
Policing Your Productivity: 7 Tools to Help You Focus (Entrepreneur)
Are you easily distracted by social media and entertainment sites? Keep your focus, especially when it’s time to study, with these helpful programs.
Did we miss your favorite article from the week? Let us know what you’ve been reading in the comments or tweet @ManhattanPrep
POWERPREP II for Mac is here!
Can I use POWERPREP on a Mac? This is one of the questions most frequently asked by students calling us here at Manhattan Prep.
Well, I’m happy to say that my answer to this question is now a resounding, YES! The long awaited introduction of ETS POWERPREP software for Mac users is here! As of July 2013, ETS offers a Mac-compatible version of their terrific practice test software. Mac-loving students will no longer have to worry about borrowing their roommate’s cousin’s boyfriend’s PC to take their practice GRE.
For those of you who aren’t familiar with the software, POWERPREP is free practice exam available directly from ETS, the administrators of the GRE. POWERPREP is an excellent resource, one that we recommend all of our students use. The software includes two computer-based tests, sample Analytical Writing topics, scored sample essays and reader commentary, test-taking strategies, a math review, and test tutorials. We recommend that students save at least one POWERPEP II test until fairly close to their real exam to get a nearly exact practice run of what will happen on test day.
So, rejoice, Mac-users, POWERPREP for Mac is now available.
Five Music Albums Packed with GRE Vocab
Some song writers really like their vocab! While you probably won’t pick up a lot of GRE words listening to Justin Beiber, here are just a couple suggestions where you might actually enjoy picking up some new vocab.
1. Tidal, Fiona Apple. A 90s classic, if you were a teenage girl in the 90s. Pop in a copy of Tidal on your drive to work and you’ll be exposed to words such as undulate, appeasing, embers, carrion, divination, acquaint, resounded, coercion, inversion, stifled, deviant, sullen, oblivion, cunning, condescend, abound, enrapture, wary, reverence, endeared, discern, oblige, covet, demeanor, contusion, adagio, intrusion, and endeavor.
2. HMS Pinafore, Gilbert and Sullivan. Okay, seriously, any Gilbert and Sullivan you can get yourself to enjoy is going to fill you with vocab words. This show alone has got saucy, frivolous, depraved, resigned, melodious, consolation, menial, pine, gallant, eloquence, pennant, sprightly, articled, tar, dictatorial, furl, scorn, domineering, tyrant, protrude, audacious, anguish, ignoble I didn’t even make it through half of the songs. And this might be the lightest on vocab of all the Gilbert and Sullivan choices.
3. Black on Both Sides, Mos Def. If you’re a rap fan, this is a fantastic album that you probably already have in your collection. If not, you might check it out if you want the chance to pick up words such as armament, sentiment, brandish, dispossessed, rivalry, saturated, infatuate, glisten, nemesis, scrutinize, staccato, vibrantly, apparition, odyssey, treacherous, testament, beneficent, manifest, reverence, temperament, firmaments, ubiquitous, ephemera, and flagrant, to name just a few.
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Four GRE Study Activities that Students Love but Teachers Hate
Okay, the title shouldn’t describe them as activities that teachers hate, so much as activities that this teacher hates. I don’t hate them because they’re completely useless, but I hate them because they distract well-meaning and hard-working students. Studying for the GRE is time-consuming and hard enough without inefficient strategies.
There are certain study strategies that exasperated students have in common. When a student tells me that they’re following one of these strategies, the rest of the story is usually, and my score isn’t going up at all. Here are, in my opinion, the four big ones, and their better alternatives.
Binging on problems
This is a big one. Stories that start with, I did all the problems in the book or I bought an extra set of problems and did every single one usually end with but I’m not getting any better!
It’s not that doing all the problems in the book is a bad thing, but chances are if you’re doing that many problems, you aren’t giving them the time they deserve. Doing problems is a good way to assess what you know, but it’s actually not a great way to get better at doing problems. That comes when you review what you’ve done.
Wonder if you’re doing too many problems with not enough review? Go back and do 10 problems you did last week, timed. Do you remember how to tackle them? If so, you’re probably reviewing enough. If not, you might want to tackled fewer problems in more depth in order to see a better payout.
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Free GRE Events This Week: June 24- June 30
Here are the free GRE events we’re holding this week (All times local unless otherwise specified):
6/24/13– Online- Monday’s with Jen– 9:00PM – 10:30PM
6/26/13– New York, NY- Free Trial Class– 6:30PM – 9:30PM
Looking for more free events? Check out our Free Events Listing Page.
Friday Links: Student Loan Debt, Summer GRE Reading, and More!
Happy Friday and happy summer! Get a jump start on your summer reading with a few of this week’s top grad school articles:
When Grad School Does and Doesn’t Make Sense (USA Today College)
Here are 10 circumstances when grad school may make sense and 10 when it might not.
How to Choose the Right Graduate Program? Consider Your Personal Life (About.com Grad School)
Sometimes you have to look beyond academics to choose the right graduate school program for you.
5 Tips for Applying to Graduate Programs in Clinical or Counseling Psychology (About.com Graduate School)
Be on your game to improve your odds of admission to graduate programs in psychology with these five helpful tips.
How to Tackle Student Loan Debt as Quickly as Possible (USA Today College)
Here are some wise steps to pay off your student debt as quickly and efficiently as possible.
Read Your Way to a Higher Score: Summer Reading Recommendations from our GRE Instructors (Manhattan GRE Blog)
To celebrate the first day of summer, we’re bringing back a post from the archives. Check out our list of summer reading recommendations!
Did we miss your favorite article from the week? Let us know what you’ve been reading in the comments or tweet @ManhattanPrep
GRE on your TV
or your bookshelf, or radio, or whatever. When it comes to remembering GRE words, it really helps to link them to something you know.
Here are just ten examples of GRE words showing up in shows, movies, or books that you might know. If you’re a visual or auditory learner, try searching for GRE words that are bugging you on YouTube to see if any helpful references come up!
It might be clear after working your way through this post that these references come from the perspective of a 30-something American woman. The references that come to mind for you might be completely different, but the sentiment remains the same “ link the words to things you know, and they’re likely to stick with you.
- Leery: If you’re the right age to remember Dawson’s Creek, you know that Dawson Leery was always worried about someone breaking his heart. To be leery means to be guarded or wary and not trust others. We knew you never should have trusted Joey, Dawson. She broke your heart.
- Wily: Why was Wile E. Coyote so darn obsessed with that roadrunner anyway? He certainly did try some clever, crafty, tricky, sneaky stuff. Maybe that’s how he got his name, since that’s what wily means.
- Plucky: If you’re between the ages of 25 and 35, you probably remember Plucky Duck from Tiny Toon Adventures. The word plucky means courageous, brave, and game for adventure “ and Plucky was perfectly all those things, always coming up with egotistical schemes where he tried to undertake some mammoth feat.
- Craven: In The Secret Garden, Master Craven is so afraid to face life after his wife dies that he locks up her garden, retreats from the world, and even avoids their ailing son at any cost. Perhaps he got his name because craven means spineless, timid, or fainthearted. Don’t worry “ he gets it together by the end of the book.
The Math Beast Challenge Problem of the Week – June 17, 2013
If x is a positive integer and the units digit of x2 is 6 and the units digit of (x “ 1)2 is 9, which of the following is the units digit of (x “ 2)3?