05-30-2009, 10:42 PM
malcs Wrote:You may want to do your own checking on that Research Methods exam duplication. I got burned by EC on my very old GRE in computer science. I had let my EC enrollment lapse by about five years, and when they redid my evaluation they claimed that I had 6 credits of overlap. Get it in writing, like you did, then check the exact credit plan that EC gives you for the GRE.
I'm going to second this suggestion. My final evaluation ended up with 7 credits of overlap with the GRE Psych, instead of the four credits I had expected, but I had enough credits to make up the difference so I didn't care to argue it.
I had taken CLEP Social Sciences & History as well, but they did not deduct all six credits from my GRE Psych credits for that. I had an Introductory Psych course worth 4 credits. I am not sure where the other three were taken from, but I know it was only three additional credits that were deducted, not six like SS & History is worth. Maybe just three of the six credits for that exam are duplicative?
As for the original question, I do feel the GRE was worth it for me, and it would have been worth it for me at any score above the 60th percentile. I had hoped to get three or six upper level credits out of it to save enough money to stay in my budget, and I was pleasantly surprised to have knocked out 18 upper level so cheap. I think it's worth a shot, but you should have a back up plan. It's a gamble, and I had planned to take ECEs to fulfill my degree requirements. After I got my score, it was SO fun to cross all those exams off my list. I do think malcs idea of pursuing ECEs until the Oct GRE is a good suggestion, then if the GRE doesn't work out you won't feel like you wasted time, and it's a good way to split the difference between $130 for the GRE versus $1300 for all those ECEs.
[SIZE="6"]~~ Alissa~~[/SIZE]
[size="4"]"Whether you think you can or think you canât, youâre right." - - Henry Ford[/size]
[COLOR="DarkSlateGray"][SIZE="2"]DONE:
BS Liberal Studies, Excelsior College May 2009[/SIZE][/COLOR]
Current website favorite:
http://www.careeronestop.org/
[size="4"]"Whether you think you can or think you canât, youâre right." - - Henry Ford[/size]
[COLOR="DarkSlateGray"][SIZE="2"]DONE:
BS Liberal Studies, Excelsior College May 2009[/SIZE][/COLOR]
Current website favorite:
http://www.careeronestop.org/