There are some basic principles for people who are trying to prep on their own. Crafting studying technique is something more tactical, and personal, that you'll have to do on your own, based on what you know about how you best learn. Most of these, apart from distinctions as noted, apply to standardized tests in general:
1. Start by creating a realistic schedule of daily work. Because the daily part is important, realistic probably translates to 15-20 minutes a day. "I'm going to spend two hours a night" is a good intention, but unlikely to happen.
2.Use only the official materials. There is only 1 published book for the GRE. You can download it from here http://www.mediafire.com/?639ow5dp3d07ouy
3.Materials include practice problems and practice tests. Do the practice problems first, then do regular practice testing as the actual test date approaches. There are two official GRE practice tests that are free to download. Because the tests are adaptive, they can be taken multiple times. You can get away with around three sittings per test without significant overlap, so that allows you six practice tests. These should be taken once a week for the six weeks leading up to the test, in an environment that simulates the actual testing environment as closely as possible (e.g., wake up and start the test at the times you would need to, isolate yourself in a distraction-free room, don't let yourself listen to music, put your phone somewhere else).
4.Find someone with whom you can review the questions you get wrong. This doesn't have to be a professional if that's not feasible for you, but it should be someone who's good at the relevant content, or has scored well on the test before, or both
5.Though there is no official vocabulary list, GRE prep requires studying vocabulary. Learn as many as words you can, in fact there is no harm in learning more.
6.The one mandatory thing every test taker should go through is the powerprep II software. It is the official software provided by ETS. This provides two full length tests. Trust me they are par with the original GRE. It is also said that the score you get in powerprep will match your original GRE score by a range of +3 or -3
Some of the online practice tests
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