Inside the New GED Test
The improved test better preps adults for their future.
1 / 11
New Test Readies for Today's Adult Education - The General Education Development was created in 1942 as a form of high school diploma equivalency. But times have certainly changed. A new revamped GED Ready™ exam launched on Jan. 2, but what’s different and how will it better prepare Americans for college and today’s workforce? Go inside the new high school equivalency exam. — Dominique Zonyéé (@DominiqueZonyee)(Photo: Ted S. Warren/AP Photo, File)
2 / 11
What Is the GED? - The General Education Development was created in 1942 to help World War II veterans who dropped out of high school. The original exam was divided into five parts: writing, reading, social studies, math and science. In most states, test takers must be 17 years or older to qualify for the exam.(Photo: Kevin Lamarque/Landov/Reuters)
3 / 11
Out With the Old, In With the New - Other than offering a more rigorous computer-based testing style, the new GED Ready exam will take half the time as the old exam. Test scores can be delivered instantly and new tests also feature guided study plans to help further prepare test takers.(Photo: Alan Youngblood/Ocala Star-Banner /Landov)
4 / 11
New Test Comes at a Higher Price - The new 2014 GED Program will cost test takers one flat rate of $120, with $40 of that being returned to the local testing centers. The new price is up from a varying state-to-state cost which ranged from free to as much as $80.(Photo: Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group/MCT/Landov)
5 / 11
Are All States on Board for the New GED? - The higher costs and computerized exam is not sitting well with educators across the nation. At least nine states — New York, New Hampshire, Missouri, Iowa, Montana, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine and West Virginia — severed ties with the GED test and opted for new tests that are entering the market.(Photo: Stan Carroll/The Commercial Appeal/Landov)
ADVERTISEMENT