If the GRE works anything like the National Registry test for EMS (which I've been given the impression it may), then if you're getting really really hard questions, than it means the system thinks you're just about ready to move out of that category of questions. If you've answered a bunch of that "type" of questions and start getting "impossible" questions, once you get one wrong, you will have... sort of determined your maximum competency at one question "hardness" below the question that stumped you - at least in the eyes of the test. It's random, though. So if you get one of the really hard ones before you've gotten easy ones, it'll throw you easier ones, to determine what the "hardest" level of question is that you can get.
I'm probably doing a really messy job of explaining that all. I started out before I left for work, and then picked back up when I got home from work, just before picking up studying for a big exam tomorrow. So, yeah. Anyway, like you said, breathe, read, and you do know how to do this stuff.
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I'm probably doing a really messy job of explaining that all. I started out before I left for work, and then picked back up when I got home from work, just before picking up studying for a big exam tomorrow. So, yeah. Anyway, like you said, breathe, read, and you do know how to do this stuff.
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