GRE Subject Tests Overview | Literature in English
- Each edition of the test consists of approximately 230 questions
on poetry, drama, biography, the essay, the short story, the
novel, criticism, literary theory, and the history of the
language.
- Some questions are based on short works reprinted in their
entirety, some on excerpts from longer works.
- The test draws on literature in English from the British
Isles, the United States, and other parts of the world. It
also contains a few questions on major works, including the
Bible, translated from other languages.
- The test emphasizes authors, works, genres, and movements.
The questions may be somewhat arbitrarily classified into
two groups: factual and critical.
- The factual questions may require a student to identify
characteristics of literary or critical movements, to assign
a literary work to the period in which it was written, to
identify a writer or work described in a brief critical comment,
or to determine the period or author of a work on the basis
of the style and content of a short excerpt.
- The critical questions test the ability to read a literary
text perceptively. Students are asked to examine a given passage
of prose or poetry and to answer questions about meaning,
form and structure, literary techniques, and various aspects
of language.
The approximate distribution of questions according to content
categories is indicated by the following outline.
- Literary Analysis: 40-55%
Questions that call on an ability to interpret given passages
of prose and poetry. Such questions may involve recognition
of conventions and genres, allusions and references, meaning
and tone, grammatical structures and rhetorical strategies,
and literary techniques.
- Identification: 15-20%
Recognition of date, author, or work by style and/or content
(for literary theory identifications see IV below).
- Cultural and Historical Contexts: 20-25%
Questions on literary, cultural, and intellectual history,
as well as identification of author or work through a critical
statement or biographical information. Also identification
of details of character, plot, or setting of a work.
- History and Theory of Literary Criticism: 10-15%
Identification and analysis of the characteristics and methods
of various critical and theoretical approaches.
The literary-historical scope of the test follows the distribution
below.
| 1. Continental, Classical, and Comparative Literature
through |
1925 5-10% |
| 2. British Literature to 1660 (including Milton) |
25-30% |
| 3. British Literature 1660-1925 |
25-35% |
| 4. American Literature through 1925 |
15-25% |
| 5. American, British, and World Literatures after |
1925 20-30% |
Because examinees tend to remember most vividly questions that
proved troublesome, they may feel that the test has included
or emphasized those areas in which they are least prepared.
Students taking the GRE Literature in English Test should remember
that in a test of this many questions, much of the material
presents no undue difficulty. The very length and scope of the
examination eventually work to the benefit of students and give
them an opportunity to demonstrate what they do know. No one
is expected to answer all the questions correctly; in fact,
it is possible to achieve the maximum score without answering
all the questions correctly.
The committee that develops the test is aware of the limitations
of the multiple-choice format, particularly for testing competence
in literary study. An examination of this kind provides no opportunity
for the student to formulate a critical response or support
a generalization, and, inevitably, it sacrifices depth to range
of coverage. However, in a national testing program designed
for a wide variety of students with differing preparations,
the use of a large number of short, multiple-choice questions
has proved to be the most effective and reliable way of providing
a fair and valid examination.
The committee considers the test an instrument by which to
offer supplementary information about students. In no way is
the examination intended to minimize the importance of the students'
college records or the recommendations of the faculty members
who have had the opportunity to work closely with the students.
The committee assumes that those qualities and skills not measured
by a national multiple-choice test are reflected in a student's
academic record and recommendations. However, the test may help
to place students in a national perspective or add another dimension
to their profiles.
A test intended to meet the needs of a particular department
should be constructed specifically to measure the knowledge
and skills the department considers important. A standardized
test, such as the GRE Literature in English Test, allows comparisons
of students from different institutions with different programs
on one measure of competence in literature. Ideally, a department
should not only investigate the relationships between the success
of students in advanced study and several measures of competence,
but also conduct a systematic evaluation of the test's predictive
effectiveness after accumulating sufficient records of the graduate
work of its students.

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