panditnehru wrote:
Hello Experts!
I am about to take my gre on aug-8th and i want to know whether the B schools accpet GRE scores to permit a admit into the B-school.
If they accept GRE then what is the criteria they consider?
please help me out to shortlist the universities that accept GRE for an MBA under 310 - 320 range of Gre.
Thanks in advance
Wishing every one best of Luck.
Dear
panditnehru,
I'm happy to respond.
First of all, this link shows all the MBA programs that accept the GRE for admission.
https://www.ets.org/gre/revised_general/ ... /programs/To find which schools accept GRE scores in the range you specify, I would recommend searching on the websites for the individual schools.
What criteria do the B-schools consider when weighing GMAT vs. GRE candidates, or when considering high scores vs. low scores? That's very hard to say, and that is not really
Magoosh's bailiwick.
Magoosh can help you a lot with getting a good GMAT score or a good GRE score, but for these tricky questions about admissions, it may be more appropriate to work with an admission consultant. I will say that if your score is not stellar, you have more options if there is something about your candidacy that is unique----something about your background or your story or your ambitions that makes you stand out profoundly from all the others who are similar to you. There are thousands of people from India with technical backgrounds whose English is good but not excellent and who want to go to business school: if this describes you, then what you makes you stand out from all the others?
For improving your verbal skills, I will recommend reading this blog:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2014/how-to-imp ... bal-score/Technically, that's written for GMAT takers, but most of the same recommendations will apply to you as well.
Also, here are some free GRE Vocabulary flashcards:
https://gre.magoosh.com/flashcards/vocabularyI hope all this helps.
Mike
_________________
Mike McGarry
Magoosh Test PrepEducation is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire. — William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939)