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Study tips written for how the test actually works.
Each article targets a specific concept or test-day decision — not general advice. New pieces publish as exam formats and scoring guidelines update.
Topics include: reading extended response passages, calculator use on Math Part 1, and interpreting science graphics under time pressure.
Answers straight from the instructor.
These are the questions that come up most often — about scoring, subject order, and what to study first. Read them before you send a message.
How is the GED scored?
Which subject should I prepare for first?
Is the GED Ready practice test worth taking?
How long does preparation typically take?
Yes. The GED Ready is the official predictor test. A 75% or higher result means you are likely ready to pass. Take it before scheduling your exam date.
It varies by starting point. Most learners need 2–6 months of consistent study per subject. Daily 30-minute sessions outperform weekend cramming.
Each subject is scored 100–200. A passing score is 145 per subject. You can retake individual subjects — you do not retake the whole exam.
Start with Math — it takes the most consistent practice and affects how you approach Science and Social Studies data questions.
Send a specific question. Get a real answer.
Every message goes directly to the instructor. If your question points to a gap in the course, it may become the next article or video.
