I took the Miller either years ago, or so. It was actually fun. You can practice with analogies ahead of time if you want, but it's mostly a test of basic intelligence with a large helping of vocabulary. If you're strong in those areas you should be fine.
If you can get your hands on some practice tests that might be helpful, otherwise I don't know that this is a test you can study for. Relax and enjoy the ride. Oh, and then there's this: Top Ten Ways to Fight off MAT Test-Related Anxiety - For Dummies Good luck.
I took it a few years ago. It's not really something you can study for, although the practice tests that Kiz suggests might help. I was nervous about it, but did extremely well. It really is similar to an intelligence test.
LOL. I use "Singing for Dummies" as part of the music programs I teach and I get that same question from students. The material is really good, but I really hate that stupid name. It's done well for them, but it causes problems too.
I love the For Dummies books. They cover the same material as more traditional (that is, pedantic) texts but LO AND BEHOLD, are written by people who actually know how to write. The only criticism I've ever heard about them is "I don't need those books, I'm no dummy!!!" which is preposterous since it doesn't at all address the quality of the material. Ironically, I feel like the FD books do not insult my intelligence anywhere near as much as text books do. Instead of "Astromony for Dummies" it should be "Astronomy for Those Smart Enough To Not Need 10 Pages to Explain What Can Be Said In a Single Sentence or Chart"
Woof, woof, woof. I will always remember the things I should have known, but didn't. The one word I missed on a 1st grade spelling test. ["Delicious"] The only question I got wrong on the MAT: something like "Length is to width as warp is to . . . " All I knew then was that "woof" was something that came out the front end of a dog. So I got a 99 (equivalent to 594 on today's scale).
Being a Trekkie I would have chosen light speed, blackhole, fabric of space, port thrusters, event horizon or something of that nature. Of course Woof sounds like Worf. answer: "Warp are threads that run the length of the fabric where as weft are threads that run from selvage to selvage across the width of the fabric. Weft is woven back and forth in the course of the warp to make fabric. " Definition of Warp and Weft? - Ask.com Live long and prosper!