GED Practice Test

Taking a GED practice test is one of the best ways you can use to test your progress in learning. While in high school curricula there are several tests that allow for a person to follow up on their progress and be able to objectively identify the areas of improvement he or she needs to develop the GED focuses only on the knowledge one has at any given point in time. It has the upshot of providing a collage equivalent diploma but the down site is that there is no visible learning curve. Unless that is you are using a recurring GED practice test to be able to track your progress.

In fact the GED practice test can actually turn that down site in to a positive because just like the real exams allows you to show who you are the practice test can allow you to learn at your own speed an measure that instead of dragging along at the medium to low speed of the slowest individual. However you will need to be fair with yourself and follow the strict rules of the exam. That is the reading part of the exam needs to have 40 multiple choice questions and the need to refer to at least one passage from poetry, drama, prose fiction before 1920, another one from between 1920 and 1960 and yet another from modern prose, after the 1960. It will also need to consist of a non-fictional text. And only then is the GED practice test for reading complete.

The GED practice test for writing will have to consist of two parts. The first will be testing the theoretical knowledge of writing such as sentence structure and mechanics. The second part is the most fun because it consists of an essay on a very broad range of themes. Just make sure that you choose a different theme every time so as to not get caught off balance by the test. The Social Studies Test consists of 50 multiple-choice questions regarding 4 areas of interest: geography, history, civics and government and economics. And that completes the human’s part of the GED practice test.

The objectives sciences part of the GED practice test follows up with the science test which consists of 50 multiple-choice questions referring to these areas: physics and chemistry, life science, and earth and space science. The Mathematics Test consists of two 25-question sections. In the first section, a calculator may be used. The Mathematics Test covers material from the following content areas: number operations and number sense, measurement and geometry, data analysis, statistics, and probability, and algebra, functions, and patterns. Some formulas are provided for the mathematics section but you should make a point out of understanding the meaning behind the formulas because that will not only help you remember them better but they will also help you realize how and why you should use them making problem solving an easy task. And with this you will have finished you GED practice test which we encourage you to take at least every other week so you will be familiar with the testing environment but to help you track your progress.