Page 1 of 1

.

Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2017 2:24 am
by appind
.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2017 5:24 am
by cavalier1138
At schools accepting the GRE, I doubt this matters, because you still have a reportable LSAT. Everything we've seen so far indicates that the schools still have to report LSATs to USNWR (the only thing admissions departments care about), so if you have scores for both tests, the LSAT should take precedence.

That said, getting in to Harvard with a 171 is already a bit of a reach. You'd be better off focusing on getting a lower T13 school with money (depending on your GPA).

Re: GRE score

Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2017 5:48 am
by icechicken
95th percentile is like a 168 on the LSAT. 93rd is about a 166. I can't imagine Harvard is interested, either from a rankings perspective or a get-the-best-students-possible perspective; those are bottom-quartile numbers for them. And cavalier is right that the LSAT is probably more important anyway. I wouldn't bother.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2017 10:29 am
by URMSenator52
GPA? If below, a 3.7 not very good odds. A below median LSAT Score of 171, is most likely not getting into H. Your going to have shoot for at least; 173-174 for H. Do you have international or major domestic volunteer, and or Fortune 500 work experience? Or undergrad leadership experience? Your GRE score in your hypo correlates. Overall to below median as one other user stated.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2017 8:29 pm
by TheKingLives
.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2017 8:31 pm
by cavalier1138
TheKingLives wrote:...but I would go ahead and submit it for that high quant score.
As pointed out above, the quant score isn't that high when you go by percentile rank, and Harvard is bound to apply similar standards to the GRE. There's no reason to think that they would practically require 99th percentile LSAT scores and then lower their standards for the GRE.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2017 8:34 pm
by TheKingLives
.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2017 10:57 pm
by appind
they will have to drop their standards anyways when considering GRE quant, a perfect 170 in GRE quant is only 97%.

their is no section in the app to submit GRE score. does it mean one would have to ask and pay ETS to report GRE to the school?
is it possible to skip gre score now and submit a retake of GRE score later in case of WL ?

Re: GRE score

Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2017 11:17 pm
by icechicken
appind wrote:they will have to drop their standards anyways when considering GRE quant, a perfect 170 in GRE quant is only 97%.
Yeah, which is why it's hard to imagine why they'd settle for anything less than 170 outside of 4.0+ GPAs, underrepresented minorities, and other institutional needs.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 8:56 am
by Npret
appind wrote:they will have to drop their standards anyways when considering GRE quant, a perfect 170 in GRE quant is only 97%.

their is no section in the app to submit GRE score. does it mean one would have to ask and pay ETS to report GRE to the school?
is it possible to skip gre score now and submit a retake of GRE score later in case of WL ?
My guess is that for now retaking the GRE isn't going to help when you have LSAT score. Retake that if you retake anything.
I don't think you have to submit your GRE score if you don't want to.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 11:29 am
by BEng,MBA,FRM,JD(?)
Sorry for quoting earlier -

170 on GRE would not mean dropping their standards. It's the perfect score. Nobody's fault that 3% people score that high. Moreover, a combination of 93%ile in verbal and 95% in quant would be somewhere close to 98th percentile score combined. You can use the GRE to GMAT convertor to get an idea of the percentile of the combined score. I checked yours here - https://www.ets.org/s/gre/flash/bschool ... 17302/170/ and it is an equivalent of 750 in the GMAT which is the 98th percentile.
Good luck! I was also waitlisted and am applying with a GRE+LSAT

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 3:09 pm
by TheKingLives
.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 4:24 pm
by cavalier1138
BEng,MBA,FRM,JD(?) wrote:Sorry for quoting earlier -

170 on GRE would not mean dropping their standards. It's the perfect score. Nobody's fault that 3% people score that high. Moreover, a combination of 93%ile in verbal and 95% in quant would be somewhere close to 98th percentile score combined. You can use the GRE to GMAT convertor to get an idea of the percentile of the combined score. I checked yours here - https://www.ets.org/s/gre/flash/bschool ... 17302/170/ and it is an equivalent of 750 in the GMAT which is the 98th percentile.
Good luck! I was also waitlisted and am applying with a GRE+LSAT
Of course, accepting students in the 98th percentile would actually be accepting the lower end of Harvard's acceptance scale.

And this highlights one of the major issues with the GRE: it's objectively easier than the LSAT. So I wouldn't say that you can count someone's quant score as high just because the quant section is easy enough that there is no 99th percentile.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 4:32 pm
by appind
BEng,MBA,FRM,JD(?) wrote:Sorry for quoting earlier -

170 on GRE would not mean dropping their standards. It's the perfect score. Nobody's fault that 3% people score that high. Moreover, a combination of 93%ile in verbal and 95% in quant would be somewhere close to 98th percentile score combined. You can use the GRE to GMAT convertor to get an idea of the percentile of the combined score. I checked yours here - https://www.ets.org/s/gre/flash/bschool ... 17302/170/ and it is an equivalent of 750 in the GMAT which is the 98th percentile.
Good luck! I was also waitlisted and am applying with a GRE+LSAT
it was responding to the following quote by the other poster as it mentioned how low percentile meant lowering standard.
There's no reason to think that they would practically require 99th percentile LSAT scores and then lower their standards for the GRE.
I think accepting even up until mid 160s would also be fine for them even tho it's like 90 perecentIle on quant.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 4:34 pm
by cavalier1138
appind wrote:
There's no reason to think that they would practically require 99th percentile LSAT scores and then lower their standards for the GRE.
I think accepting even up until mid 160s would also be fine for them even tho it's like 90 perecentIle on quant.
But why?

Why do you think that Harvard's motivation here is to accept students with lower scores without any other mitigating factors (diversity, experience, etc.)?

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 7:09 pm
by A. Nony Mouse
Last time I was paying any attention to this, it was accepted as given that GRE scores were sort of useless for STEM grad programs, because anyone with any aspirations of going to grad school in a STEM field was guaranteed to ace the quant portion because it was so basic. I took it ages and ages ago so it may have changed since then, but I have to admit I don’t see much motive for taking other than top GRE scores (barring amazing enough other stuff in one’s application).

(Also to be fair my quant score was piss poor so I mean basic only as relative to grad level STEM work, which I of course was totally incapable of performing, so not meant as a knock on anyone for their score.)

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 7:19 pm
by cavalier1138
A. Nony Mouse wrote:(Also to be fair my quant score was piss poor so I mean basic only as relative to grad level STEM work, which I of course was totally incapable of performing, so not meant as a knock on anyone for their score.)
But to be fair...er... that makes perfect sense if you were applying for post-grad programs in non-math fields. This is the other catch with the GRE: percentiles are based on scores for a single part of the test, but everyone takes both parts. So it's telling that the top score bracket is so large, especially because it includes a not-insignificant number of test-takers who are phoning it in on one portion of the test because it's irrelevant to their field of study.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2017 7:28 pm
by A. Nony Mouse
cavalier1138 wrote:
A. Nony Mouse wrote:(Also to be fair my quant score was piss poor so I mean basic only as relative to grad level STEM work, which I of course was totally incapable of performing, so not meant as a knock on anyone for their score.)
But to be fair...er... that makes perfect sense if you were applying for post-grad programs in non-math fields. This is the other catch with the GRE: percentiles are based on scores for a single part of the test, but everyone takes both parts. So it's telling that the top score bracket is so large, especially because it includes a not-insignificant number of test-takers who are phoning it in on one portion of the test because it's irrelevant to their field of study.
Oh, agreed.

Re: GRE score

Posted: Thu Oct 05, 2017 2:42 am
by BEng,MBA,FRM,JD(?)
cavalier1138 wrote:
BEng,MBA,FRM,JD(?) wrote:Sorry for quoting earlier -

170 on GRE would not mean dropping their standards. It's the perfect score. Nobody's fault that 3% people score that high. Moreover, a combination of 93%ile in verbal and 95% in quant would be somewhere close to 98th percentile score combined. You can use the GRE to GMAT convertor to get an idea of the percentile of the combined score. I checked yours here - https://www.ets.org/s/gre/flash/bschool ... 17302/170/ and it is an equivalent of 750 in the GMAT which is the 98th percentile.
Good luck! I was also waitlisted and am applying with a GRE+LSAT
Of course, accepting students in the 98th percentile would actually be accepting the lower end of Harvard's acceptance scale.

And this highlights one of the major issues with the GRE: it's objectively easier than the LSAT. So I wouldn't say that you can count someone's quant score as high just because the quant section is easy enough that there is no 99th percentile.
I agree with you that there is an issue with the GRE. But HLS decided to go for it. And hence, when it comes to quant, I am fairly certain they won't feel they are dropping their standards by taking in applicants with a maximum score.

And 98th percentile would mean 98.xx percentile. Which essentially is a percentile equivalent of 171-173 on the LSAT. That said, they test different skills and given the much larger pool of people who take the GRE, it's surely easier to score a 98 percentile on GRE than on the LSAT.