MAT Exam: Complete Prep Guide for Miller Analogies 2026 June
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What Is the MAT Exam?
The miller analogies test is a standardized graduate admissions exam administered by Pearson. It's used by over 600 graduate programs — mainly in education, psychology, and the liberal arts — as part of your application. Unlike the GRE, the MAT focuses on one thing only: your ability to reason through analogies.
You'll face 120 partial analogies in 60 minutes. Each one gives you three terms and asks you to identify the fourth. Simple in structure. Hard in practice. The test draws on vocabulary, general science, math, history, fine arts, and literature — so breadth of knowledge matters as much as raw reasoning ability.
Here's what the mat test looks like in practice:
- 120 items, 60-minute time limit
- Only 100 items are scored; 20 are unscored experimental items (you won't know which)
- Questions use a standard A:B::C:D format
- No calculator allowed — all reasoning is verbal and conceptual
Who Needs to Take It?
Primarily grad school applicants. Some doctoral programs — particularly in counseling, school psychology, and educational leadership — accept the MAT instead of or alongside the GRE. A handful of honors programs and scholarships also use it. Check your target programs directly, since requirements vary widely.
The exam is also used by Mensa for membership qualification, if that's on your radar.
How to Register
You register through Pearson's official MAT website and schedule at an authorized testing center. The fee is around $75, though it varies by testing site. You can retake the exam, but there's a required 30-day waiting period between attempts — and most graduate programs will see all your scores.
Scores are valid for five years from the test date, so plan accordingly if you're applying to programs over multiple cycles.
Key Takeaway: MAT certification demonstrates expertise in this field. Most candidates spend 4-8 weeks preparing with practice tests before taking the exam.
MAT Exam Format Breakdown
Every analogy on the miller analogies test follows one structure: A:B::C:D. You see three of the four terms and must choose the correct fourth from four answer choices. That's it. But don't let the clean format fool you — the content spans a surprisingly wide range.
Content Categories
Pearson doesn't publish an exact breakdown, but the test typically draws from these areas:
- Humanities — literature, philosophy, fine arts, music
- Natural sciences — biology, chemistry, physics, astronomy
- Social sciences — psychology, sociology, history, economics
- Mathematics — number theory, algebra, geometry
- Vocabulary and language — word relationships, synonyms, antonyms, roots
The analogies test your knowledge AND your ability to see relationships between concepts. You might know both terms but still miss the question if you can't identify the right relationship type — semantic, categorical, functional, or associative.
Relationship Types You'll See
There are roughly six relationship types the MAT uses repeatedly:
- Degree — hot is to scorching as cold is to frigid
- Part to whole — finger is to hand as branch is to tree
- Object to function — knife is to cut as hammer is to pound
- Cause and effect — study is to knowledge as exercise is to fitness
- Characteristic — fire is to hot as ice is to cold
- Association — Shakespeare is to Hamlet as Tolkien is to Gandalf
Once you recognize these patterns, you'll see them everywhere — and your speed will improve dramatically.
MAT Scoring Explained
Your raw score (number correct out of 100 scored items) gets converted to a scaled score ranging from 200 to 600. The national mean is approximately 400, with a standard deviation of about 25 points.
Most programs care about your percentile rank more than your raw scaled score. A score of 400 puts you at roughly the 50th percentile. Competitive programs often want applicants in the 60th percentile or higher — which translates to roughly a scaled score of 410 or above.
You'll also receive a sub-score for each content area, which can help you identify where to focus your prep if you plan to retake.
How Long Should You Study?
Four to eight weeks is typical for most test-takers. If your knowledge base is strong across the content areas, four weeks may be enough. If you haven't touched a history textbook since high school or your science knowledge is shaky, budget closer to eight weeks — and focus heavily on building vocabulary and content knowledge, not just practicing analogies.
Daily practice matters more than long weekend sessions. Even 30 minutes a day of active recall — flashcards, reading, analogy drills — outperforms a three-hour Saturday session followed by nothing for six days.

MAT: Pros and Cons
- +yerba mate — mAT exam preparation strengthens your knowledge across all domains
- +Passing the exam proves competency to employers and clients
- +Study materials and practice tests are widely available
- +Exam-based credentials are portable across states and employers
- +Clear exam objectives help focus your study plan effectively
- −Exam anxiety can affect performance — practice tests help reduce it
- −Registration fees are non-refundable if you miss your test date
- −Limited retake opportunities may apply with waiting periods
- −Exam content updates periodically — use current study materials
- −Testing center availability may require advance scheduling

Study Strategies That Actually Work
The single best thing you can do for your MAT score is expand your vocabulary and general knowledge. Unlike most standardized tests, you can't really out-logic the MAT — you either know the terms or you don't. So read broadly, use vocabulary flashcards daily, and don't neglect art history, classical music, and literature.
When practicing analogies, always identify the relationship first before you look at the answer choices. Write it out: 'A is to B because...' Then apply that same relationship to the C term and find the D that fits. This two-step approach prevents you from getting pulled toward tempting but wrong answers.
Use the miller analogies practice materials available here — they're built specifically to match the real exam's content distribution. Time yourself from day one. Speed matters on the actual test, and you don't want pacing to be a surprise on exam day.
The MAT rewards preparation. It's not a test you can walk into cold. But with consistent daily effort over four to eight weeks — vocabulary building, content review, timed practice — you'll be ready to put up a score that opens doors.
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.
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