I went to a clinical science program and was on the application review committee for 4 years. A low GRE would absolutely impact the review. The issue is that there are so many stellar applicants across the board that we’d need to find ways to filter people out.
I currently attend a clinical science program and have done this in my time in the program. How are you operationalizing low? The only way a person is not getting their other materials considered is with an
exceptionally low GRE score. Moreover, if there are so many stellar applicants, it sounds like the GRE is being used as a tie breaker or to a way to filter when they have too many applicants to consider in depth. There's no way a program like Yale's can reasonably go through all the application materials for the over 500 applicants they had last year in just a month or so until they send out interview invites.
One year, I worked with one faculty member and we couldn’t narrow down her applicants beyond the top 17. She ended up having to do 17 Skype interviews to help her narrow it down to the top 3 invites. GRE definitely factored in. Someone also said that Quant score wasn’t that important. I would disagree. Maybe because my program was scientifically rigorous, it came into play a few times. An applicant with a Q score below 159 I’d say would be looked at with a much more critical eye.
Seriously?
I do think the accessibility issue is really being dismissed here. The cost absolutely impacts some people’s ability to take it (and potentially have to retake it). Additionally, there aren’t as many sites located near poorer areas, and it can be difficult to get there for many. Anybody who is dismissive about these concerns should acknowledge their privilege.
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Additionally, the GRE requires very specific identification information requirements that can pose barriers to undocumented student applicants.
For what proportion of applicants is this an issue?
Sure. I guess I was speaking to the larger issue that is being discussed here.
So each year in my program a grad student is assigned to a different faculty member to review applications. Two out of the 4 professors I worked with over the years filtered out lower GREs. They’d send me the spreadsheet with those folks already removed. The other 2 professors were more flexible and we would review the whole list. Everybody who applied to these professors would get at least a glance.
Sounds like the issue not the use of the GRE, but rather inconsistency in how it is used. Sounds like there should be some kind of empirically-based best practices developed....
Regarding low GREs and stellar applications. In large numbers? No. But there were a couple who I thought were excellent across the board, but scored in the mid-150s range. They were not invited. One also happened to be a POC.
How is an above average GRE score "low?"
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I've never seen anyone's application get tossed for an above average GRE score like that. Again, this is why it's important to operationalize your terms.
Again, I can’t say with any accuracy as 50% of the faculty I worked with filtered lower GREs out before I can see them. But as I mentioned, the 2 applicants I am thinking of that the other faculty considered had years of research experience, posters, and pubs. Stellar letters. One almost made the invite cut but was overruled by the rest of the faculty. This suggests to me that there are stellar applicants we miss when we filter out lower GREs. And if people are filtering out, which I suspect many programs/faculty do, how are we supposed to really gauge the percentage of folks who were stellar despite having lower GREs?
Sure, there are probably some great people who are missed because there are hard or soft filters (i.e., coming back around to those applications later if there are more interview slots or other interviewees didn't pan out), but the question is one of sensitivity and specificity. How many really competitive applicants are being missed when including the GRE vs. when it isn't included? This is an empirical question, not one that should be answered via anecdote and intuition.
On one hand, by keeping the GRE, a higher score can lift some disenfranchised applicants who had less exposure to opportunities due to life circumstances (I also doubt how impactful a high GRE is on applicants who have fewer other opportunities). On the other hand, by requiring it, you are excluding a sizable portion of people, likely lower SES and/or minority applicants, from even being considered. Either decision is likely going to disenfranchise some. For me, I feel uncomfortable with flat out excluding people with fewer resources.
People with more research experience are probably going be of greater means than those who don't have it. You need the money and time to go to a university with that level of research being done, which is cost prohibitive for many people, especially if they don't live in a large metro area or in a college town. Even if there are research opportunities at your institution, you need to be of enough means to be able to dedicate time and energy to attending lab meetings, doing research etc. People from lower SES backgrounds often have to work to put themselves through school and can't afford to forgo that time when they could be working. I have quite a few of these kinds of undergrads in the classes I teach. And sure, some people can get paid research jobs after graduation, but many others get unpaid volunteer research positions, especially as many of those paid positions require prior experience that they couldn't afford to get during undergrad. Again, people from lower SES backgrounds can't afford to do this, especially not for the amount of time per week and overall duration required to be competitive for grad school.
Conversely, the GRE is relatively cheap and quick by comparison.
With all this in mind, isn't it equally unfair to be filtering applicants based on the amount of research experience they have?
Right. But for our program at least, proof of research experience/productivity is a non-negotiable. A perfect GRE for someone with little research experience is not going to make any cuts. And I believe research ability is more directly tied to the kind of work they will be doing in graduate school. We are able to glean more meaningful information from those experiences than someone’s score on the GRE.
It's not really that simple. Just as there are differences in how faculty are using GRE scores in considering applicants, there are differences in how research experience is evaluated and in how productivity is obtained. Across disciplines, some faculty are quite stingy when it comes to authorship and sometimes don't even include people involved in the research who should be getting credit for their intellectual contributions, while others are too generous. They give authorship credit to undergrads who just did data entry and cleaning or ran participants, but justify it by those students being "bright" or having "potential" and wanting to give them a leg up into grad school where they're sure they'll succeed. Do you not think there are some troubling biases in the latter? What is the prevalence of each of these situations? I have no idea, just as you have no idea how often the GRE is causing truly competitive applicants to be dismissed outright.
And it’s not just taking the GRE once. The fact that there are those who have the means to fund themselves to take prep courses to improve scores (mine was $600 for an online on demand program) also perpetuates inequities.
This is all valid. But also doesn’t reflect my experience either. I’m a Latinx woman, and even though I had strong undergraduate quantitative training, spent a lot of money on study prep/GRE (~$1k total), and scored very well on the practice tests (163/162), I scored much lower on the actual test (159/158). I think the constant exposure to the idea that people like me do poorly on these exams engaged my stereotype threat. Just like the paper that Seven Costanza shared above suggests.
I mean, I'm white and I definitely could not have afforded to spend $1000 in study prep and GRE fees....
Simply ignoring the GRE won’t solve the systemic problem, as you stated. But I don’t think it’s not impactful. Ideally, we have to take a look at the problem and come together to make changes at each level of the system. But I don’t think that’s going to happen anytime soon, especially in this current climate.
What is "this current climate?"
I used the books for several weeks also, but my score wasn’t improving as much as I wanted and I was running out of practice exams to take on the weekends. I felt the on demand program with videos, explanations, and thousands of testing questions in the test bank that could be tailored to what I was struggling with was exponentially more helpful than the books were, and that is when my scores really started increasing.
Ok, but that sounds like a personal thing. Not every study method works for every person. I never could have afforded to spend hundreds of dollars on test prep, so I got free books online and from the library. I studied during my lunch break and on public transit on the way home (I couldn't afford a car either).
Wanted to pull back to a broader view of admissions barriers and highlight this post. From the little that I've seen so far, I would absolutely agree that lack of access to quality research mentorship and experience is one of the biggest barriers in graduate admissions. Multiple people in this thread have already said that lack of research productivity is a non-starter for admissions. Many students from marginalized backgrounds are unable to attend schools that would give these types of research opportunities, and some who are struggle to take advantage of these school's opportunities because of family commitments or having to take other jobs. I was fortunate that I could use research as my work study at the same or better pay rate, but I know this was a rare situation.
Separately, I'm curious to see whether schools continue to offer virtual interviews in addition to or in lieu of in-person. IMO this would significantly decrease the cost of the entire admissions process (flights, time off work, etc) and, based on anecdotes from last year,
probably provides a similar view of candidates. Agree with
@WisNeuro 's concern about making evidence-based decisions, so would love to see whether interview type leads to different outcomes.
Subjectively, it's not similar at all. Interviews last year provided maybe a couple of hours at best with the applicants for our lab. We tried lots of different things to encourage more contact, but it so awkward and artificial and we didn't want to pressure applicants into doing more than they felt comfortable or to cause them to be too fatigued for their real interviews. Pre-COVID we had more time at the dinner the night before interviews with our applicants than we did altogether with virtual interviews. I definitely would prefer to go back to in-person post-COVID and have the department to look for ways to pay for applicant travel.
As I mentioned before, investing in test prep material is unlikely to substantially boost an individual’s scores after a certain point.
Ok, but there seem to be two conflicting arguments being made here. Either the test prep material is relatively ineffective beyond a certain point, so it shouldn't matter that it's available, because there's no reasonable way for applicants who don't do well on high stakes testing to dramatically improve their performance, OR they do help, but they're expensive so it's just reinforcing existing SES disparities by allowing applicants of higher SES backgrounds to gain an advantage over meritorious applicants of lower SES backgrounds.
It’s also fairly common for competitive applicants to obtain stellar verbal scores but low quant scores, which will ultimately hurt their chances of gaining admission into a clinical psych phd program that is research focused.
Is it "fairly common?" How are you operationalizing that? This is another empirical question that you are answering with anecdote, belief, and intuition.
I do agree that accessibility is also a significant issue and some people simply cannot afford the outrageous test fees.
The test fees are one of the cheapest parts of applying for grad school. I spent more having my transcripts sent than for score reports and my application fees alone were cumulatively multiple times more expensive than what I paid for the GRE and all my score reports combined.
I'm not defending ETS, which sucks, but I'm sick of hearing this canard, especially as someone who had (and still has) no money.
I wouldn’t be surprised if ETS suddenly decides to reduce test fees and increase accessibility, so that the GRE can continue to be used as a screener when reviewing applicants for admission.
Maybe. As I said, they do suck.
In my graduate program, there was a cut-off score for GREs and applicants who didn’t score above it were automatically rejected before the faculty members could even review their materials. The admissions committee would set the bar higher or lower depending on the volume of applications. Other qualitative factors could offset a slightly lower score on one of the areas provided that it was but higher than the cut off and the other two scores were substantially higher.
Ok, what is your substitute to cut down the hundreds of applications to a manageable number that can be reasonably review in the 1-2 months before interview invites need to be extended?