ive not heard of any PA school that requires the gre to allow a waive of that test. i know that one of the schools near me uses it to evaluate applicants for interviews through assigning points values for the scores, along with gpa. ive the gre isnt so much a measure of fitness for a masters program as much as it is a way to satisfy other academic departments with masters programs to the fact that a PA programs fall in line with what the graduate schools require. mostly, you will see a PA school gre requirement at places that have a graduate school that students must be admitted under. for instance, to go to the university of washington PA program, one must be admitted to the university of washington graduate school... and they require a gre be taken for all the departments in the graduate school. so the gre is par for the course. additionally, they could give a darn whether you were smart enough to get an MBA. PA school is a different ball game.
You've probably not heard it because it's unlikely that schools advertise it, though I'm sure some might. Besides, who would want to take the GMAT plus 2yrs of an MBA to avoid the GRE?
Sorry pamac, but on this issue I will have to respectfully disagree with you.
The purpose of the GRE is not up for debate, the
answer is well documented by ETS, it's not my opinion, just go ahead an take a look for yourself by
googling it.
PA school is indeed a different ball game than an MBA, though having excellent grades in the GRE tells admissions nothing about the individual doing well in PA school. In fact, many PA schools don't require it.
The GRE is a standardized exam that is used for thousands of different masters degrees. It's purpose is simply to determine your ability to handle graduate work (and even at that it's not a very good indicator).
I know colleagues that pursued 2nd masters after their MBAs - one in psych, the other in telecom, both schools waived the requirement for them. Neither school mentions it on their website, they just had to call.
I was just wondering if PA schools that require the GRE, would waive it. That's all.
Similar to one of my classes that required 2 pre-requisites that I did not have, but it was the only class I could attend at the time. The school waived the requirement, but warned me that w/o the requisite background I may not do well. I was one of the few in the class with an A. The rest, with all their pre-reqs and healthcare backgrounds didn't fare as well. So much for pre-reqs.
It's on that basis that this coming semester I'm taking other classes where the pre-reqs have been waived for me by 2 different schools.
I suspect that many schools would waive the requirement, depending on the candidate situation. GMAT+ 2yrs of MBA trumps a 3hr exam in my book. It'll be up to each school to make that determination. If they say, "no", so be it.
I also think the reverse is true. That is, someone with an MCAT+master's level clinical credentials. I suspect many MBA schools would waive the GMAT requirement for that individual.
If I really wanted a particular PA school (the one by me doesn't even require the SAT or a bachelors) that required the GRE, it would just be an inconvenience, not an obstacle.
While we disagree on this one issue, I always respect your opinion and insight.