The MAT is not a typical graduate admissions exam. Where the GRE leans on reading passages and quantitative reasoning, the Miller Analogies Test asks you to solve 120 partial analogies in 60 minutes. Each item gives you three terms and four answer choices, and you have to pick the term that completes the analogy. Simple format, brutal pacing.
You get 30 seconds per item. Maybe less, once you factor in the moments you spend rechecking a tricky relationship. That time pressure is the whole game. The MAT does not reward slow, careful readers. It rewards people who can spot a relationship pattern, file it, and move on.
Admissions committees use MAT scores for many master's and doctoral programs in education, psychology, counseling, and a handful of business and humanities tracks. Some programs accept either the MAT or the GRE. Others require one specifically. Check your program's policy before you spend a Saturday morning at a testing center.
The test takes about an hour, including the tutorial and demographic questions. The actual scored section runs 60 minutes flat. Fees are roughly $100 depending on the test center, which is cheaper than the GRE. Score reports go to your selected schools at no extra cost when you list them on test day.
The MAT has no calculator. No essay. No reading passages. Just analogies, knowledge, and time. People who excel tend to have broad general knowledge across literature, history, science, math, and the arts. People who struggle often have the vocabulary but get caught flat-footed by a science or fine-arts reference they never studied.
Every MAT item has the same shape. You see three terms and a blank, with four answer choices. The terms appear in one of two orders, and the trick is figuring out which pairs go together before you guess.
Take an example. PARIS to FRANCE as TOKYO to blank with choices CHINA, JAPAN, KOREA, INDIA. Easy. PARIS is the capital of FRANCE, so TOKYO is the capital of JAPAN. The relationship is capital-to-country, and the test groups PARIS with FRANCE and TOKYO with the answer.
But sometimes the test scrambles you. You might see PARIS to TOKYO as FRANCE to blank. Now the pairs cross. PARIS pairs with FRANCE (capital and country), and TOKYO pairs with JAPAN. Same relationship, different layout. Spotting which terms pair up is half the skill.
The MAT recycles a finite set of relationship patterns. Synonyms. Antonyms. Part to whole. Cause and effect. Worker to tool. Worker to product. Object to function. Degree of intensity. Category to example. Creator to creation. Famous person to field. Author to work. Country to capital. Country to currency. Element to symbol. There are more, but if you train your eye on these, you cover most of the test.
The hardest items are not the ones with hard words. They are the ones with simple words and ambiguous relationships. A word like LIGHT can mean illumination, lack of weight, lack of seriousness, or a verb meaning to ignite. The MAT loves polysemy. When two answer choices both seem to fit, you almost certainly have the relationship wrong, not the vocabulary.
If you cannot find the relationship within 15 seconds, eliminate two wrong answers, guess, flag it, and move on. There is no penalty for guessing on the MAT, so an educated guess always beats running out of time on item 105. Speed beats certainty on this test.
The MAT reports a scaled score between 200 and 600, with 400 as the mean and a standard deviation of 25. It also reports your percentile rank against test-takers in your intended major and against all test-takers from the past three years.
The scaled score matters more than the raw score. Pearson uses 100 of the 120 items for scoring and treats 20 as experimental, but you do not know which is which. Treat every item as scored. A scaled score of 410 puts you above the 50th percentile. A 450 puts you near the 90th. A 500 is rare and lands you in the top fraction of a percent.
Most programs publish a minimum MAT score around 400, but competitive programs in clinical psychology or selective education schools may want 410, 425, or higher. The percentile rank against your intended major is the number admissions officers actually scan first.
Literature, philosophy, religion, mythology, and the fine arts. Authors and works, artistic movements, classical references.
History, geography, economics, political science, psychology, and anthropology. Historical figures, events, and theories.
Biology, chemistry, physics, earth science, and astronomy. Element symbols, scientific units, and famous scientists.
Basic arithmetic, geometry, algebra concepts, and quantitative relationships. Roman numerals, fractions, and simple calculation patterns.
Vocabulary, etymology, prefixes and suffixes, foreign-language roots, and grammar terms. Often the densest single content area.
Capitals, currencies, presidents, monarchs, sports, and pop culture. The catch-all that punishes thin backgrounds.
Twelve weeks is the sweet spot. Less than eight and you are cramming. More than sixteen and you start forgetting earlier material before test day arrives. Twelve weeks gives you enough runway to drill weak areas, build pacing stamina, and finish with two or three full practice tests.
Weeks one and two are diagnostic. Take a full official practice test under timed conditions. Score it. Note which content areas killed you and which relationship types tripped you up. Do not study yet. Just gather data.
Weeks three through six are content building. Pick the two weakest content areas from your diagnostic and front-load them. If science was your gap, work through a basic biology and chemistry review. Flashcards for element symbols, scientific units, and famous scientists. If literature was your gap, build a list of 200 author-work pairs and drill them daily.
Weeks seven and eight are relationship pattern drilling. Pull 50 practice analogies a day, focusing on speed and pattern recognition. The goal is not to solve every one. The goal is to start seeing the relationship type within five seconds of reading the stem.
Weeks nine and ten are full timed sections. Two 60-minute practice runs per week, alternating with targeted review of what you missed. Track your error patterns. If you missed three Greek mythology items in a row, build a 30-card deck of major Greek gods and heroes.
Weeks eleven and twelve are tapering. One full practice test in week eleven. Light review in week twelve. Sleep, hydration, and a calm test-day routine matter more in the final stretch than another marathon study session.
Spend 40 seconds per item for your first two weeks. Speed comes from pattern recognition, not panic. Once you can identify the relationship type quickly, the answer often falls out on its own.
Hit 30 seconds per item by week six. That leaves a small buffer to revisit flagged items. Mark anything you guess on with a flag and circle back if time allows.
Aim for 25 seconds per item. Plan to finish the 120 questions in 50 minutes, leaving 10 minutes to review flagged items. Never spend more than 45 seconds on any single analogy.
You cannot solve an analogy if you do not know what the words mean. That sounds obvious, but it is the single biggest predictor of MAT performance. Strong vocabulary turns a hard analogy into a medium one, and a medium one into a layup.
The most efficient vocabulary-building approach is etymology. Learn 100 common Greek and Latin roots, and you can decode thousands of English words. PHIL means love, so philosophy is love of wisdom, philology is love of language, and philanthropy is love of humanity. BIO means life, GEO means earth, HYDRO means water. Stack roots with prefixes and suffixes, and you crack unfamiliar words on the fly.
Build a personal flashcard deck of every word you missed on a practice test. Add 10 to 15 new words per week from a high-frequency MAT vocabulary list. Review the deck daily. Spaced repetition apps work well here because they prioritize words you keep forgetting.
Most test-takers have one or two glaring content gaps. Identify yours early and attack them.
Science gaps are common among humanities majors. Buy a basic high-school chemistry and biology review book and work through it. Memorize the first 30 elements with symbols. Learn the major scientific units, like ohm, hertz, newton, and pascal. Know the famous scientists by field: Curie for radioactivity, Mendel for genetics, Watson and Crick for DNA, Einstein for relativity.
Literature gaps are common among science majors. Build a list of 100 major authors and one or two of their canonical works. Shakespeare to Hamlet. Dickens to Great Expectations. Austen to Pride and Prejudice. Add American, British, and selected international authors. Add poets, playwrights, and a few philosophers.
Geography and history gaps catch nearly everyone. Drill country-capital pairs, country-currency pairs, US presidents in order, and major historical events with dates. The MAT does not test obscure history, but it does test breadth.
The MAT runs at controlled testing centers, mostly on college campuses and at Pearson VUE locations. You schedule directly through the test center, not through a national website. Each center sets its own dates, fees, and policies, so confirm everything when you book.
Bring two forms of ID. The primary must be government-issued with a photo and signature. The secondary just needs your name. No phones, calculators, watches, scratch paper, or food in the testing room. The center provides scratch paper and a pencil if needed, though most testing is now computer-based and you can use the digital scratch area.
Arrive 30 minutes early. Use the bathroom before you start. Once the timer begins, you cannot pause. Some centers allow short breaks, but the clock keeps running, so plan to power through.
You can send scores to up to three schools for free on test day. You list them before the test begins, so look them up in advance. The MAT does not let you preview your score before deciding whether to send it. You commit when you list the schools.
If you want to see your score first, do not list any schools on test day. Take the test, get your preliminary score, then order official transcripts later for a fee. The trade-off is cost versus information.
Admissions committees read MAT scores in context. A 410 from a strong undergrad with a tight personal statement and good letters carries more weight than a 440 with weak everything else. The MAT is one signal among many, not a gate.
That said, if your target program publishes a median admitted MAT around 420, you want to be at or above that median. Sub-median scores require everything else in the application to be strong, including research experience, fit with faculty interests, and clear motivation for the program.
Retaking the MAT is allowed, but most centers require a 30-day wait between attempts. The official guidance permits up to three attempts in a 12-month period. Each attempt produces a separate score report, and most programs see all your scores or your highest. Check with each school's policy.
Sixty minutes feels short. By item 40 you may be sweating about pace. By item 80 you may panic if you miss a relationship. The mental game is real and most prep materials ignore it.
Build pacing checkpoints. By minute 15, you should be on item 30. By minute 30, item 60. By minute 45, item 90. If you slip behind, accelerate. If you are ahead, do not slow down. The buffer is for the end, not the middle.
Train under realistic conditions. Take practice tests at the same time of day you will sit the real test. Use noise-canceling headphones if your testing center allows them, or earplugs if not. Get used to the digital interface by using Pearson's official practice tests, which mirror the real format.
Sleep matters more than one extra study session. Eight hours the night before the test beats four hours of last-minute drilling. Caffeine helps, but only if you are used to it. Test day is not the day to try a new energy drink.
Spending too long on a single item. The MAT does not let you go back to skipped items easily, and dwelling on one analogy can cost you five later. If you do not see the answer in 30 seconds, eliminate, guess, flag, and move.
Ignoring relationship direction. The order of the terms matters. PARIS and FRANCE is capital-to-country, but FRANCE and PARIS is country-to-capital. The answer must match the direction of the given pair, or the order across the analogy must be consistent.
Overstudying one content area. Spending 80% of your prep on vocabulary while ignoring science means you crush 40 items and bomb 20. Spread your prep across all six content areas, weighted toward your weakest two.
Skipping the official practice tests. Pearson sells official MAT practice tests through its website. They are the most realistic preview of the test you will get. Take them. The third-party books are useful for drilling, but the official tests are the gold standard for predicting your score.
Spend money where it returns score points. The first dollar should go to Pearson's own MAT practice tests. They use retired items written by the same authors as the live test, so they predict your real score better than any third-party product. Buy one early in your study plan to set a baseline and one near the end to confirm readiness.
Third-party books are your second buy. Barron's, Kaplan, and Princeton Review each publish solid MAT guides with content review chapters and hundreds of practice analogies. Their items skew slightly easier than the real test, but volume drilling matters more than perfect difficulty calibration in the middle stretch of your prep.
Free resources fill the gaps. The official Pearson MAT Candidate Information Booklet contains a short sample test and the full score interpretation guide. Anki and Quizlet host user-built decks for MAT vocabulary and content review. Quality varies on user decks, so verify entries against a primary source before you memorize them.
Most realistic preview. Retired items from the same writers. Use for final score prediction in weeks 11-12. About $30-50 per test pack.
Strong content review, hundreds of practice analogies, two full-length tests. Items skew slightly easier than the real exam. Best for volume drilling in weeks 7-10.
Heavy focus on relationship patterns and pacing tactics. Good for the pattern-recognition phase in weeks 7-8. Includes online supplemental tests.
Free user-shared flashcards for vocabulary and content. Quality varies. Verify against an authoritative source before memorizing. Best for daily review.
Free PDF from Pearson. Includes a short sample test and the official scoring explanation. Read it before week one of your study plan.
A pocket Greek and Latin roots reference doubles your vocabulary growth rate. Look for books listing 100-200 high-frequency roots with example words.