<p>Hi, I'm a college senior who was diagnosed with a learning disability 2 years ago. I receive extra time on tests at my school, but apparently more testing is required to receive extra time on the GRE's. How fast do you have to be on the GRE's? I was fine on the SAT's, but the ACT's tore me to pieces because they just went too fast. I want to get the testing but it seems so expensive. It's $200 for a one hour pre-testing consultation alone which just seems exorbitant.</p>
<p>Have you tried taking any practice GRE’s online just to see what the pacing is like? Not even with hard studying, but to see what kind of questions they ask and to estimate how much time you think you’d need. Of course, the more you study for the GRE, it’s likely you’ll be faster than when you’re coming at it cold.</p>
<p>Unfortunately I didn’t take the ACT so I can’t compare the ACT with the GRE in terms of pace. </p>
<p>To give you a breakdown, the structure of the CBT GRE. [GRE</a> Revised General Test: Computer-based Test Content and Structure](<a href=“http://www.ets.org/gre/revised_general/about/content/cbt/]GRE”>http://www.ets.org/gre/revised_general/about/content/cbt/) Does it sound manageable right off the bat?</p>