COMMON WRITTEN EXAMINATION [CWE] FOR RECRUITMENT IN CLERICAL CADRE IN PUBLIC SECTOR BANKS
Institute of Banking Personnel Selection
COMMON WRITTEN EXAMINATION [CWE] FOR RECRUITMENT IN CLERICAL CADRE IN PUBLIC SECTOR BANKS
COMMON WRITTEN EXAMINATION [CWE] FOR RECRUITMENT IN CLERICAL CADRE IN PUBLIC SECTOR BANKS
RITES Ltd Invites Online Applications For The Post Of Graduate Executive Trainee
Applications are invited from young, dynamic, energetic and motivated persons of Indian Nationality for the position of ‘Graduate Executive Trainee’ (GET) in RITES for its different projects.
Post:
Graduate Executive Trainee
Name of Post / Discipline:
Civil Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Architecture
Information Technology (IT)
Metallurgy & Chemical Engineering (M& C)
Signal &Telecommunication Engineering (S&T)/Electronics Engineering
Nationality : A candidate must be a citizen of India.
Minimum Educational Qualification :
Graduate in the relevant Engineering discipline i.e. Civil/ Mechanical/ Electrical/ Architecture/ Metallurgy or Chemical/ Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering with 60% marks (50% for SC/ST/OBC candidates) from a AICTE/Govt. approved University/Institute. For IT Discipline, Graduate Degree in Engineering in Computer Science/ Information Technology, or, Full time Masters in Computer Applications (MCA) with 60% marks (50% for SC/ST/OBC candidates) from a AICTE/Govt. approved University/Institute
Age Limit : 21 years and must not have crossed the age of 30 years as on 01.08.2012.
Physical Standards :
A candidate should be physically and mentally fit. For being considered as PWDs, the candidate should have disability of Forty per cent (40%) or more
Fees :
Candidates who wish to apply against this vacancy notification are required to pay nonrefundable fees, as specified below, through a crossed Demand Draft in favour of ‘RITES LIMITED’ payable at Gurgaon
Selection Process :
i- The selection process consists of written test and Interview. Eligible candidates will have to appear in the written test.
How to apply:-
.i- Interested Candidates fulfilling the eligibility criteria are required to apply online using the link http://www.rites.com. All candidates should procure Demand Draft of requisite value before attempting to apply on line.
ii- On submission of valid application online, the system will generate ‘Registration Slip’ with Registration no., which has to be downloaded, signed, photograph affixed and sent the same along with demand draft of requisite fees drawn in favour of ‘RITES LIMITED’ payable at Gurgaon through ordinary post only in an envelope superscribed with VC No. and “APPLICATION FOR THE GRADUATE EXECUTIVE TRAINEE” on or before 1700 hrs of 20.10.2012 {last date of receipt of hard copy of Application(Registration slip) by ordinary post} at the following address:-
“The Advertiser(RITES),
Post Box No. 9248,
Krishna Nagar Head Post Office,
Delhi-110051
Last Date : 13 October 1
Post:
Graduate Executive Trainee
Name of Post / Discipline:
Civil Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Architecture
Information Technology (IT)
Metallurgy & Chemical Engineering (M& C)
Signal &Telecommunication Engineering (S&T)/Electronics Engineering
Nationality : A candidate must be a citizen of India.
Minimum Educational Qualification :
Graduate in the relevant Engineering discipline i.e. Civil/ Mechanical/ Electrical/ Architecture/ Metallurgy or Chemical/ Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering with 60% marks (50% for SC/ST/OBC candidates) from a AICTE/Govt. approved University/Institute. For IT Discipline, Graduate Degree in Engineering in Computer Science/ Information Technology, or, Full time Masters in Computer Applications (MCA) with 60% marks (50% for SC/ST/OBC candidates) from a AICTE/Govt. approved University/Institute
Age Limit : 21 years and must not have crossed the age of 30 years as on 01.08.2012.
Physical Standards :
A candidate should be physically and mentally fit. For being considered as PWDs, the candidate should have disability of Forty per cent (40%) or more
Fees :
Candidates who wish to apply against this vacancy notification are required to pay nonrefundable fees, as specified below, through a crossed Demand Draft in favour of ‘RITES LIMITED’ payable at Gurgaon
Selection Process :
i- The selection process consists of written test and Interview. Eligible candidates will have to appear in the written test.
How to apply:-
.i- Interested Candidates fulfilling the eligibility criteria are required to apply online using the link http://www.rites.com. All candidates should procure Demand Draft of requisite value before attempting to apply on line.
ii- On submission of valid application online, the system will generate ‘Registration Slip’ with Registration no., which has to be downloaded, signed, photograph affixed and sent the same along with demand draft of requisite fees drawn in favour of ‘RITES LIMITED’ payable at Gurgaon through ordinary post only in an envelope superscribed with VC No. and “APPLICATION FOR THE GRADUATE EXECUTIVE TRAINEE” on or before 1700 hrs of 20.10.2012 {last date of receipt of hard copy of Application(Registration slip) by ordinary post} at the following address:-
“The Advertiser(RITES),
Post Box No. 9248,
Krishna Nagar Head Post Office,
Delhi-110051
Last Date : 13 October 1
Stem-Cell Scientists Win Nobel Prize
Two stem-cell researchers have won this year's Nobel Prize in
Physiology or Medicine for their groundbreaking work in cellular
reprogramming, a technique that unleashed a wave of advances in biology,
from cloning to the possible treatment of diseases using a patient's
own cells.
Experiments by John B. Gurdon of the United Kingdom and Shinya Yamanaka of Japan showed that mature cells taken from the body could be changed to an embryonic-like state in a laboratory dish, a head-spinning discovery that is the biological equivalent of turning back time.
Their work "has changed the accepted
dogma" that mature cells are condemned to exist in a specialized state,
said Martin Evans, a British stem-cell pioneer who shared the 2007 Nobel
Prize for medicine, in an interview.
Cellular reprogramming triggered the rewriting of biology textbooks and spawned thousands of new experiments in labs around the world. It led to the first cloned animal—a frog—and to the first cloned mammal, Dolly the sheep. It also paved the way for deriving embryonic-like stem cells without destroying human embryos, sidestepping an ethically contentious approach.
Once cellular reprogramming is used to turn mature cells into embryonic-like ones, those cells can be further manipulated and turned into heart, nerve, muscle and virtually all other tissues types. This freshly made tissue—from an Alzheimer's patient, for example—could be inexpensively grown and studied in a lab dish.
Drug firms have already started to test drugs on human tissue made through reprogramming. Next year, fresh retinal cells derived in this way will be transplanted into people for the first time, in a Japanese trial for patients with an eye disease known as macular degeneration.
Scientists used to believe the fate of our cells was a one-way trip. We start as a fertilized egg; become an embryo consisting of immature, undifferentiated cells; then gradually develop into a body of specialist cells, including blood, bone, muscle and skin.
In 1962, Dr. Gurdon, while trying to
understand how simple, undifferentiated cells became all the other cells
in the body, performed an audacious experiment. He removed the DNA from
a frog egg and replaced it with the DNA of a mature cell taken from a
tadpole. The egg developed into a healthy, cloned tadpole. (The same
approach would be used to create Dolly the sheep in 1996.)
The frog experiment was an effort to answer "a pure scientific question about how we came to be formed. There was no foreseeable therapeutic benefit," said Dr. Gurdon in an interview. Now 79, Dr. Gurdon is a professor at the Gurdon Institute, part of Cambridge University.
Dr. Yamanaka, 50, was born in the year Dr. Gurdon did his frog experiment. Dr. Yamanaka would eventually ponder a related question: Could the Gurdon reprogramming trick be done without using eggs—which, in human cases, can be hard to come by?
Dr. Yamanaka had the answer a few years later. He demonstrated that by adding just four genes to a mature cell, he could turn it into an embryonic-like state. He first achieved this with mouse cells, and in 2007 he reported the same result for human cells. He transformed those cells, in turn, into heart, nerve and other human tissue in a lab.
"Without [Dr. Gurdon's] work we would
never have started this risky project 12 years ago," said Dr. Yamanaka,
who is a professor at Kyoto University and affiliated with the Gladstone
Institutes in San Francisco, in an interview.
Since Dr. Yamanaka's breakthrough, many labs have altered how they do stem-cell research. Some years ago, Ian Wilmut, the scientist who created Dolly the sheep, abandoned a cloning-based approach in favor of the Yamanaka method. Last week, Japanese scientists said they used the Yamanaka technique to make mouse eggs.
Though approaching 80, Dr. Gurdon remains as busy as before. He was at his lab at 8.30 a.m. Monday when someone from the Nobel committee called with the news. Dr. Gurdon said he intends to keep plugging away "because I haven't answered the question I am fully trying to answer: What is the mechanism that the egg uses to reverse differentiation?"
Experiments by John B. Gurdon of the United Kingdom and Shinya Yamanaka of Japan showed that mature cells taken from the body could be changed to an embryonic-like state in a laboratory dish, a head-spinning discovery that is the biological equivalent of turning back time.
EPA/Cambridge University
British scientist John B. Gurdon.
Cellular reprogramming triggered the rewriting of biology textbooks and spawned thousands of new experiments in labs around the world. It led to the first cloned animal—a frog—and to the first cloned mammal, Dolly the sheep. It also paved the way for deriving embryonic-like stem cells without destroying human embryos, sidestepping an ethically contentious approach.
Once cellular reprogramming is used to turn mature cells into embryonic-like ones, those cells can be further manipulated and turned into heart, nerve, muscle and virtually all other tissues types. This freshly made tissue—from an Alzheimer's patient, for example—could be inexpensively grown and studied in a lab dish.
Drug firms have already started to test drugs on human tissue made through reprogramming. Next year, fresh retinal cells derived in this way will be transplanted into people for the first time, in a Japanese trial for patients with an eye disease known as macular degeneration.
Scientists used to believe the fate of our cells was a one-way trip. We start as a fertilized egg; become an embryo consisting of immature, undifferentiated cells; then gradually develop into a body of specialist cells, including blood, bone, muscle and skin.
Winners & Their Work
Read more about the 2012 winners so far, and see which prizes are still to come.Past Winners
See which academic institutions and countries have had the most winners.Related Reading
The frog experiment was an effort to answer "a pure scientific question about how we came to be formed. There was no foreseeable therapeutic benefit," said Dr. Gurdon in an interview. Now 79, Dr. Gurdon is a professor at the Gurdon Institute, part of Cambridge University.
Dr. Yamanaka, 50, was born in the year Dr. Gurdon did his frog experiment. Dr. Yamanaka would eventually ponder a related question: Could the Gurdon reprogramming trick be done without using eggs—which, in human cases, can be hard to come by?
Dr. Yamanaka had the answer a few years later. He demonstrated that by adding just four genes to a mature cell, he could turn it into an embryonic-like state. He first achieved this with mouse cells, and in 2007 he reported the same result for human cells. He transformed those cells, in turn, into heart, nerve and other human tissue in a lab.
Since Dr. Yamanaka's breakthrough, many labs have altered how they do stem-cell research. Some years ago, Ian Wilmut, the scientist who created Dolly the sheep, abandoned a cloning-based approach in favor of the Yamanaka method. Last week, Japanese scientists said they used the Yamanaka technique to make mouse eggs.
Though approaching 80, Dr. Gurdon remains as busy as before. He was at his lab at 8.30 a.m. Monday when someone from the Nobel committee called with the news. Dr. Gurdon said he intends to keep plugging away "because I haven't answered the question I am fully trying to answer: What is the mechanism that the egg uses to reverse differentiation?"
Haroche, Wineland Win Nobel Physics Prize
Serge Haroche of France and David J. Wineland of the U.S. shared the
Nobel Prize in Physics for devising clever laboratory experiments that
made it possible to control ghostly quantum particles, an achievement
that many theoretical physicists believed could never be done.
The work has already led to the creation of
clocks more than 100 times as precise as existing cesium clocks. More
important, perhaps, their work has laid the groundwork for a possible
quantum computer, a superfast-machine that—if it ever can be built—would
leave today's speediest computers in the dust.
"Through their ingenious laboratory methods Haroche and Wineland together with their research groups have managed to measure and control very fragile quantum states, which were previously thought inaccessible for direct observation," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a news release. The academy awards the Nobel Prize.
Dr. Haroche, born in 1944, is a professor at the Collège de France and École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Dr. Wineland, also born in 1944, is a physicist at the U.S. Department of Commerce's National Institute of Standards and Technology and the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colo.
Quantum particles flit around in a realm that is microscopic and mysterious. You could put two such particles a million miles apart without any direct contact, and yet they can somehow read and affect the properties of each other. Such particles can also exist in several states simultaneously—known as superposition—which is a bit like being in two places at the same time.
Single quantum particles cannot thus be easily separated from their surrounding environment; as soon as they interact with the outside world, they abandon their spooky properties. It's no wonder that in this tenuous world, the possibility of examining, controlling and counting quantum particles had long seemed remote if not impossible.
But Dr. Haroche and Dr. Wineland were able to crack the problem independently, though they approached the challenge in somewhat different ways.
Dr. Haroche controls photons—quantum particles of light—with mirrors. In his Paris lab, photons bounce back and forth between two supercooled, superconducting mirrors for a 10th of a second—a long time in quantum terms.
Dr. Haroche then zaps an atom into this trap.
The interaction between the atom and the photon reveals the presence of
the photon. With the help of some more experimental skulduggery, many
elusive photons can be measured and counted this way, without destroying
them.
At his lab in Boulder, Dr. Wineland traps ions—electrically charged atoms—by surrounding them with electric fields. The experiment is done in an extremely low-temperature vacuum. With the help of a laser, the ion is prodded into a superposition state—two states at one time—and the quantum behavior can thus be studied.
Dr. Wineland's group has used the ion-trap setup to build a clock that is 100 times more accurate than the cesium-based clocks that are currently the standard for measuring time. The ion trap could also be the basis of a quantum computer.
Today's computers encode data in binary digits, ones and zeros. A quantum machine would exploit quantum properties—such as the superposition states—to represent data and for the basis of computing operations. Some very basic calculations using quantum phenomena have already been done.
But there's a huge catch: The quantum information that's the basis for the high-speed calculations has to be isolated from the outside world, so as not to destroy the quantum properties; at the same time, the machine has to somehow communicate and pass on the results of its number-crunching to the outside world.
Based on the experiments of Dr. Wineland and Dr. Haroche, scientists are now trying to figure out how to resolve that paradox.
"Perhaps the quantum computer will change our everyday lives in this century in the same radical way as the classical computer did in the last century," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.
"Through their ingenious laboratory methods Haroche and Wineland together with their research groups have managed to measure and control very fragile quantum states, which were previously thought inaccessible for direct observation," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a news release. The academy awards the Nobel Prize.
Dr. Haroche, born in 1944, is a professor at the Collège de France and École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Dr. Wineland, also born in 1944, is a physicist at the U.S. Department of Commerce's National Institute of Standards and Technology and the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colo.
Quantum particles flit around in a realm that is microscopic and mysterious. You could put two such particles a million miles apart without any direct contact, and yet they can somehow read and affect the properties of each other. Such particles can also exist in several states simultaneously—known as superposition—which is a bit like being in two places at the same time.
Single quantum particles cannot thus be easily separated from their surrounding environment; as soon as they interact with the outside world, they abandon their spooky properties. It's no wonder that in this tenuous world, the possibility of examining, controlling and counting quantum particles had long seemed remote if not impossible.
But Dr. Haroche and Dr. Wineland were able to crack the problem independently, though they approached the challenge in somewhat different ways.
Dr. Haroche controls photons—quantum particles of light—with mirrors. In his Paris lab, photons bounce back and forth between two supercooled, superconducting mirrors for a 10th of a second—a long time in quantum terms.
At his lab in Boulder, Dr. Wineland traps ions—electrically charged atoms—by surrounding them with electric fields. The experiment is done in an extremely low-temperature vacuum. With the help of a laser, the ion is prodded into a superposition state—two states at one time—and the quantum behavior can thus be studied.
Dr. Wineland's group has used the ion-trap setup to build a clock that is 100 times more accurate than the cesium-based clocks that are currently the standard for measuring time. The ion trap could also be the basis of a quantum computer.
Today's computers encode data in binary digits, ones and zeros. A quantum machine would exploit quantum properties—such as the superposition states—to represent data and for the basis of computing operations. Some very basic calculations using quantum phenomena have already been done.
But there's a huge catch: The quantum information that's the basis for the high-speed calculations has to be isolated from the outside world, so as not to destroy the quantum properties; at the same time, the machine has to somehow communicate and pass on the results of its number-crunching to the outside world.
Based on the experiments of Dr. Wineland and Dr. Haroche, scientists are now trying to figure out how to resolve that paradox.
"Perhaps the quantum computer will change our everyday lives in this century in the same radical way as the classical computer did in the last century," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.
HAL Ltd - Management Trainee
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), invites applications for the post of Management Trainee
Post:
Management Trainee (Technical)
Discipline:
Aeronautical
Computer Science
Electrical
Electronics
Mechanical
Metallurgy
Production
Qualification:
Bachelor's Degree
in Engineering / Technology (Full Time) (4 years after 10 +2) in the
Branches of Aeronautical / Computer Science / Electrical / Electronics /
Mechanical / Metallurgy / Production, from the Institutes /
Universities recognized by appropriate statutory authorities in the
country. AMIE courses by Institute of Engineers (India) are also
eligible.AMAeSI course from the Aeronautical Society of India, New Delhi
under Aeronautical discipline, Grad IIIE course from Indian Institution
of Industrial Engineering, Mumbai under Production discipline &
AMIIM course from the Indian Institute of Metals, Kolkata under
Metallurgy discipline are also eligible. General / OBC candidates should
have secured a minimum of 65% marks and SC/ST candidates should have
secured a minimum of 55% Marks, in the aggregate, of all the Semesters /
Years or corresponding CGPA Ratings / Gradations in their Engineering
Degree Examinations. Engineering Graduates in the Aeronautical Branch
with minimum aggregate 60% marks (for General / OBC) and 50% marks (for
SC / STs) would be eligible to apply.
Management Trainee (Integrated Materials Management)
Discipline:
Electrical
Mechanical
Production
Qualification:
Bachelor's Degree
in Engineering / Technology (Full Time) (4 years after 10 +2) in the
Branches of Electrical / Mechanical / Production, from Institutes /
Universities, recognized by appropriate statutory authorities in the
country. AMIE courses by Institute of Engineers (India) are also
eligible.Grad IIIE course from the Indian Institution of Industrial
Engineering, Mumbai under Production discipline are also eligible
General / OBC candidates should have secured a minimum of 65% marks and
SC/ST candidates should have secured a minimum of 55% Marks, in the
aggregate, of all the Semesters / Years or corresponding CGPA Ratings /
Gradations in their Engineering Degree Examinations.
Management Trainee (Finance)
Qualification:
Bachelor's Degree
(10+2+3) with a pass in final examination of CA / ICWA from the
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India / Institute of Cost
Accountants of India.
Management Trainee (Human Resources)
Qualification:
Bachelor's Degree
with 2 years Full Time Post Graduate Degree / Diploma / MBA / MSW / MA
(3 + 2 years after 10 +2) with specialization in Human Resources /
Personnel Management / Industrial Relations from Institutes /
Universities recognized by appropriate statutory authorities in the
country. General / OBC candidates should have secured a minimum of 60 %
Marks in both the Bachelor’s Degree and Post Graduate Degree / Diploma
in the aggregate of all the Semesters / Years or corresponding CGPA
Ratings / Gradations. SC / ST candidates should have secured a minimum
of 50% Marks in both the Bachelor’s Degree and Post Graduate Degree /
Diploma in the aggregate of all the Semesters / Years or corresponding
CGPA Ratings / Gradations.
Age Limit: as on 01.10.2012 :28 years
Selection procedure: Eligible candidates will have to appear for an Objective Type Competitive Online Test. The Online Test will be held at Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Bhopal, Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh, Chennai, Coimbatore, Delhi, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kochi, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, Nagpur, Noida, Pune & Vijayawada. Candidates are required to choose any two cities as preference – 1 & 2 for Test Center and no change in any circumstance will be considered subsequently. However, HAL reserves the right to add / cancel any centre and allocate appropriate centre to the candidates.
Service Agreement Bond :Selected candidates shall execute a Service Agreement Bond to serve HAL for a period of 5 years (excluding the training period). In case of breach of the Service Agreement during the training period or after absorption as Engineer / Officer, the candidate is liable to reimburse the actual training expenses (including recruitment expenses, all the remuneration paid and expenses incurred during the training period), subject to a maximum of Rs. 5,00,000.
Application Fee : Rs.400/- (Rupees Four Hundred only), which is non-refundable (exempted in the case of SC / ST / PWD candidates). All core banking branches of State Bank of India (SBI) has been authorized to collect the Registration Fee in specially opened Account No. 30969511830, on behalf of HAL.
Important Dates:
Download of Admit Card for Online Test - 26.10.12
Online Test - 20.11.12 onwards
Download of Interview Call Letter at HAL Website - 6.12.12
Last Date: 19 October 12
Click Here For More Details:
http://www.hal-india.com/careers/co/MT-2012/detailed-Advt-MT_31-12-12.pdf
Selection procedure: Eligible candidates will have to appear for an Objective Type Competitive Online Test. The Online Test will be held at Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Bhopal, Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh, Chennai, Coimbatore, Delhi, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kochi, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, Nagpur, Noida, Pune & Vijayawada. Candidates are required to choose any two cities as preference – 1 & 2 for Test Center and no change in any circumstance will be considered subsequently. However, HAL reserves the right to add / cancel any centre and allocate appropriate centre to the candidates.
Service Agreement Bond :Selected candidates shall execute a Service Agreement Bond to serve HAL for a period of 5 years (excluding the training period). In case of breach of the Service Agreement during the training period or after absorption as Engineer / Officer, the candidate is liable to reimburse the actual training expenses (including recruitment expenses, all the remuneration paid and expenses incurred during the training period), subject to a maximum of Rs. 5,00,000.
Application Fee : Rs.400/- (Rupees Four Hundred only), which is non-refundable (exempted in the case of SC / ST / PWD candidates). All core banking branches of State Bank of India (SBI) has been authorized to collect the Registration Fee in specially opened Account No. 30969511830, on behalf of HAL.
Important Dates:
Download of Admit Card for Online Test - 26.10.12
Online Test - 20.11.12 onwards
Download of Interview Call Letter at HAL Website - 6.12.12
Last Date: 19 October 12
Click Here For More Details:
http://www.hal-india.com/careers/co/MT-2012/detailed-Advt-MT_31-12-12.pdf
Universities for GRE Scores
GRE Universities for Scores > 333
US Universities for GRE Score Range 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology | www.mit.edu |
Stanford University | www.stanford.edu |
University of California- Berkeley | www.berkeley.edu |
University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign | www.uiuc.edu |
University of Michigan Ann Arbor | www.umich.edu |
Cornell University | www.cornell.edu |
University of Texas at Austin | www.utexas.edu |
University of Maryland – College park | www.umd.edu |
University of California – San Diego | www.ucsd.edu |
California Institute of Technology | www.caltech.edu |
University of Wisconsin- Madison | www.wisc.edu |
University of California Los Angles | www.ucla.edu |
Harvard University | www.harvard.edu |
Carnegie Mellon University | www.cmu.edu |
Universities for Revised GRE Score > 325
US Universities for GRE Score Range 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333
Purdue University –West Lafayette | www.purdue.edu |
Princeton University | www.princeton.edu |
Pennsylvania State University –Univ Park | www.psu.edu |
Georgia Institute of Technology | www.gatech.edu |
Virginia poly Tech | www.vt.edu |
Texas A & M College Station | www.tamu.edu |
Duke University | www.duke.edu |
University of Washington – Seattle | www.washington.edu |
University of Minnesota | www.umn.edu |
Columbia University | www.columbia.edu |
Yale University | www.yale.edu |
Ohio State University | www.osu.edu |
University of Pittsburgh | www.pitt.edu |
Brown university (RI) | www.brown.edu |
John Hopkins University | www.jhu.edu |
North Carolina State University | www.ncsu.edu |
Dartmouth College, NH | www.dartmouth.edu |
Iowa State University | www.iastate.edu |
University of California- Santa Barbara | www.ucsb.edu |
Case Western Reserve University | www.cwru.edu |
Northwestern University (IL) | www.northwestern.edu |
Arizona State University | www.asu.edu |
University of Iowa | www.uiowa.edu |
Rutgers, State Univ of NJ, New Brunswick | www.rutgers.edu |
Rice University | www.rice.edu |
University of Rochester | www.rochester.edu |
University of Virginia | www.virginia.edu |
University of Pennsylvania | www.upenn.edu |
Universities for Revised GRE Score > 320
US Universities for GRE Score Range 321, 322, 323, 324, 325
University of Delaware | www.udel.edu |
University of California – Davis | www.ucdavis.edu |
University of Colorado –Boulder | www.colorado.edu |
University of Notre Dame | www.nd.edu |
University of Chicago | www.uchicago.edu |
Lehigh University (PA) | www.lehigh.edu |
University of Southern California | www.usc.edu |
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (NY) | www.rpi.edu |
University of Cincinnati | www.uc.edu |
University of Florida; Gainesville | www.ufl.edu |
Washington University St Louis | www.wustl.edu |
Vanderbilt University (TN) | www.vanderbilt.edu |
University of California - Irvine | www.uci.edu |
Michigan State University | www.msu.edu |
University of Massachusetts – Amherst | www.umass.edu |
Kansas State University | www.ksu.edu |
University of Alabama- Tuscaloosa | www.ua.edu |
University of Arizona-Tucson | www.uarizona.edu |
University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill | www.unc.edu |
Colorado School of Mines | www.mines.edu |
University of Illinois at Chicago | www.uic.edu |
University of New Hampshire | www.unh.edu |
University of New Mexico | www.unm.edu |
Boston University | www.bu.edu |
Colorado State University | www.colostate.edu |
Auburn University | www.auburn.edu |
University of Buffalo | www.buffalo.edu |
University of Akron | www.uakron.edu |
Drexel University | www.drexel.edu |
Syracuse University | www.syr.edu |
Oregon State University | www.oregonstate.edu |
Clemson University | www.clemson.edu |
MS in US Universities for Revised GRE Score > 314
US Universities for GRE Score Range 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320
University of Missouri – Rolla | www.umr.edu |
University of Nebraska Lincoln | www.unl.edu |
University of Connecticut | www.uconn.edu |
University of Utah | www.utah.edu |
University of Tennessee-Knoxville | www.utk.edu |
West Virginia University | www.wvu.edu |
University of Kansas | www.ku.edu |
SUNY- stony brook | www.sunnysb.edu |
University of Georgia | www.uga.edu |
University of Missouri-Columbia | www.mizzou.edu |
Oklahoma State University | www.okstate.edu |
Louisiana State University-Baton Rouge | www.lsu.edu |
University of South Carolina | www.sc.edu |
Tulane University | www.tulane.edu |
Indiana University - Bloomington | www.indiana.edu |
University of Oklahoma | www.ou.edu |
University of Miami | www.miami.edu |
University of Texas – Dallas | www.utdallas.edu |
Ohio University –Athens | www.ohiou.edu |
University of Houston –Houston | www.uh.edu |
Michigan technological University | www.mtu.edu |
University of Maine | www.umaine.edu |
University of Kentucky | www.uky.edu |
George Washington University | www.gwu.edu |
University of Central Florida | www.ucf.edu |
Revised GRE Score Universities for GRE > 308
US Universities for GRE Score Range 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314
Northern Illinois University | www.niu.edu |
Indiana University Purdue University | www.iupui.edu |
University of Memphis | www.memphis.edu |
University of Nevada Los Vegas | www.unlv.edu |
University of Alabama-Huntsville | www.uah.edu |
University of Idaho | www.uidaho.edu |
Mississippi State university | www.msstate.edu |
University of Missouri, Kansas City | www.umkc.edu |
University of North Carolina-Charlotte | www.uncc.edu |
Oregon Graduate Institute of Science &Tech | www.ogi.edu |
George Mason University | www.gmu.edu |
University of Indianapolis | www.uindy.edu |
University of Nebraska Omaha | www.unomaha.edu |
University of South Florida- Tampa | www.usf.edu |
Middle Tennessee State University | www.mtsu.edu |
Polytechnic University (NY) | www.poly.edu |
University of New Orleans | www.uno.edu |
University of Arkansas- Fayetteville | www.uark.edu |
Tennessee Technological University | www.tntech.edu |
University of South Florida | www.usf.edu |
University of Louisiana-Lafayette | www.lousiana.edu |
Florida Institute of Technology | www.fit.edu |
Illinois Institute of Technology | www.iit.edu |
Washington State University | www.wsu.edu |
Georgia State University | www.gsu.edu |
Revised GRE Universities for GRE > 300
US Universities for GRE Score Range 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308
Texas Tech University | www.ttu.edu |
Wayne State University | www.wayne.edu |
California State University, Sacramento | www.csus.edu |
Missouri State University | www.missouristate.edu |
New Mexico State University | www.nmsu.edu |
North Dakota State University | www.ndsu.edu |
University of Texas-Arlington | www.uta.edu |
Clarkson University | www.clarkson.edu |
Wright State University | www.wright.edu |
University of Tennessee Chattanooga | www.utc.edu |
University of Tulsa | www.utulsa.edu |
Portland state university | www.pdx.edu |
University of Vermont | www.uvm.edu |
Baylor University, Texas | www.baylor.edu |
Villanova University | www.villanova.edu |
University of Tampa | www.utampa.edu |
Louisiana Tech. University | www.latech.edu |
New Jersey Institute of Technology | www.njit.edu |
Idaho State University | www.isu.edu |
Wichita State University | www.wichita.edu |
University of Mississippi | www.olemiss.edu |
Northeastern University | www.northeastern.edu |
Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville | www.siue.edu |
University of Alaska- Fairbanks | www.uaf.edu |
Pace University, NY | www.pace.edu |
Wright State University | www.wright.edu |
Chicago State University | www.csu.edu |
South Dakota State University | www.sdsu.edu |
East Carolina University | www.ecu.edu |
University of North Texas | www.unt.edu |
SUNY Institute of Technology | www.sunyit.edu |
University of Missouri at St Louis | www.umsl.edu |
University of Northern Iowa | www.uni.edu |
University of Toledo | www.utoledo.edu |
University of Illinois at Springfield | www.uis.edu |
Old Dominion University, Virginia | www.odu.edu |
US Schools for Revised GRE Score > 290
US Universities for GRE Score Range 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300
Northwest Missouri State University | www.nwmissouri.edu |
Lamar University | www.lamar.edu |
Illinois State University, Normal | www.ilstu.edu |
University of Louisville | www.louisville.edu |
Texas A & M University, Commerce | tamu-commerce.edu |
Colorado Technical University, Colorado Springs | www.coloradotech.edu |
Boise State university, Idaho | www.boisestate.edu |
Montana State University, Bozeman | www.montana.edu |
South Dakota School of Mines & technology | www.sdsmt.edu |
North Carolina Agricultural & Tech State University | www.ncat.edu |
Southern Illinois University, Carbondale | www.siuc.edu |
Florida International university | www.fiu.edu |
North Dakota State University | www.nodak.edu |
Western Kentucky University | www.wku.edu |
Bradley University | www.bradley.edu |
Cleveland State University | www.csuohio.edu |
University of Bridgeport –CT | www.bridgeport.edu |
University of Dayton –Ohio | www.udayton.edu |
Texas A & M university, Kingsville | www.tamuk.edu |
University of West Florida, Pensacola | www.uwf.edu |
Eastern Michigan University | www.emich.edu |
Minnesota State University, Mankato | www.mnsu.edu |
Suffolk University, MA | www.suffolk.edu |
University of North Carolina, Greensboro | www.uncg.edu |
New Mexico Institute of Mining &Tech. | www.nmt.edu |
University of Central Arkansas | www.uca.edu |
Southeastern University, DC | www.seu.edu |
University of Hawaii | www.hawai.edu |
University of Texas, Tyler | www.uttyler.edu |
Eastern Washington University | www.ewu.edu |
Southern Oregon University, Ashland | www.sou.edu |
University of Texas at San Antonio | www.utsa.edu |
State University of West Georgia | www.westga.edu |
Ball State University | www.bsu.edu |
University of Texas El Paso | www.utep.edu |
Columbus State University | www.colstate.edu |
Arkansas State University | www.astate.edu |
University of Denver | www.du.edu |
North Dakota State University | www.ndsu.edu |
New York Institute of Technology | www.nyit.edu |
California State University, Chico | www.csuchico.edu |
Dakota State University | www.dsu.edu |
St Cloud State University | www.stcloudstate.edu |
Marquette University | www.marquette.edu |
MS in US Universities for Low GRE Scores ( Below 290)
US Schools for GRE Scores -
260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273,
274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287,
289.
Temple University, PA | www.temple.edu |
City College of the City of New York | www.cuny.edu |
Northeastern Illinois University | www.neiu.edu |
University of Detroit Mercy | www.udmercy.edu |
University of Arkansas Little Rock | www.ualr.edu |
California State University, Fresno | www.csufresno.edu |
Alabama A & M University | www.aamu.edu |
Widener University, Pennsylvania | www.widener.edu |
Alcorn State University | www.alcorn.edu |
Gannon University | www.gannon.edu |
University of Findlay-Ohio | www.findlay.edu |
San Diego State University, California | www.sdsu.edu |
Ball State University | www.bsu.edu |
Northwestern Polytechnic University | www.npu.edu |
Jacksonville State University | www.jsu.edu |
Saint Joseph University | www.sju.edu |
Chapman University | www.chapman.edu |
Kent State University | www.kent.edu |
Ferris State University | www.ferris.edu |
University of New Haven, CT | www.newhaven.edu |
Farleigh Dickinson University, New Jersey | www.fdu.edu |
State University of New York, Albany | www.albany.edu |
College of William & Mary | www.wm.edu |
East Tennessee State University | www.etsu.edu |
Southwest Texas State University, San Marcos | www.swt.edu |
DePaul University | www.depaul.edu |
Mc Neese State University | www.mcneese.edu |
Oakland University | www.oakland.edu |
Sam Houston State University | www.shsu.edu |
San Jose state University | www.sjsu.edu |
William Patterson University | www.wpunj.edu |
Western Carolina University | www.wcu.edu |
University of Central Oklahoma | www.ucok.edu |
Widener University | www.widener.edu |
University of St Thomas, MN | www.stthomas.edu |
Western Illinois university | www.wiu.edu |
Bowling Green State University, Ohio | www.bgsu.edu |
Delaware State University | www.desu.edu |
State University of New York, New Paltz | www.newpaltz.edu |
Central Michigan University | www.cmich.edu |
University of Southern Mississippi | www.usm.edu |
Indian University South Bend | www.iusb.edu |
Saint Mary’s University San Antonio | www.stmarytx.edu |
Shippensburg University, PA | www.ship.edu |
East Tennessee State University | www.etsu.edu |
University of Texas, Pan America | www.panam.edu |
Jackson State University | www.jsums.edu |
Oklahoma City University | www.ocu.edu |
Frostburg State University | www.frostburg.edu |
La Salle University, PA | www.lasalle.edu |
Alfred University | www.alfred.edu |
Monmouth University-New Jersey | www.monmouth.edu |
Southern New Hampshire University | www.snhu.edu |
Roosevelt University Chicago | www.roosevelt.edu |
Drake university | www.drake.edu |
Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania | www.ship.edu |
Duquesne University | www.duq.edu |
Georgia College & State University | www.gcsu.edu |
Georgia Southern University | www.georgiasouthern.edu |
Kennesaw State University | www.kennesaw.edu |
Long Island University | www.liu.edu |
Loyola University Chicago | www.luc.edu |
Northern Kentucky University | www.nku.edu |
Lawrence Tech University | www.ltu.edu |
Clark Atlanta University | www.cau.edu |
California State University, Northridge | www.csun.edu |
Catholic University of America, Washington | www.cua.edu |
Ohio Dominican College (University), Ohio | www.ohiodominican.edu |
Ferris State University, Michigan | www.ferris.edu |
Fitchburg State University, MA | www.fsc.edu |
Hawaii Pacific University, Hawaii | www.hpu.edu |
Northwood University, Michigan | www.northwood.edu |
Johnson and Wales University, RI | www.jwu.edu |
Governors State University, Parkway IL | www.govst.edu |
Troy State University, Alabama | www.troyst.edu |
Stevens Institute of Technology | www.stevens-tech.edu |
Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton | www.fau.edu |
Golden Gate University | www.ggu.edu |
Howard University | www.howard.edu |
Dominican University | www.dom.edu |
What is the GRE Score required for US University Admissions?
A Score above 325 can get you into Excellent universities. 315 - 325 will get admission from above average US Universities. 300-315 Score for Average Universities.
A Score above 325 can get you into Excellent universities. 315 - 325 will get admission from above average US Universities. 300-315 Score for Average Universities.
Follow the below table to know the universities suitable for your GRE Profile.
Any Cuff off GRE Scores for Universities?
Most of the universities don't mention the GRE Cut off scores except a few. Check university websites for information. Having above Cut off limit won't guarantee admission.
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