A FEW QUESTIONS ABOUT THE SAT REASONING TEST

<ol>
<li><p>Is there a way to tell which section on the SAT does not count toward your score?</p></li>
<li><p>For the multiple choice sections are there always 2 Writing 3 Reading and 3 Math?</p></li>
<li><p>Have there ever been any errors any SAT questions and if so what do they do if it was the test makers fault?</p></li>
</ol>

<p>1No
2Yes
3No</p>

<p>1No
2No actually- the section that does not count can be of any type.
3Not that I know of on the actual SAT, but it’s always possible. Actually I know for a fact there was an error when I took chem SAT2 but I skipped that problem. </p>

<p>If there are always 2 Writing sections 3 math sections and 3 reading sections…couldn’t you tell which subject the section that does not count is in? </p>

<p>Yes, but you won’t know which specific section is experimental, just which category. </p>

<p>@an0maly Correct, that’s what I was thinking…you can make a guess what section by determining the category…but you will still have a low chance of correctly guessing the section so it’s not worth it</p>

<p>I’m not a big fan of there being an experimental section in the SAT, it is kind of mentally unsettling knowing there will be a part that doesn’t matter…but I understand why they do it</p>

<p>My friend told me that for the last SAT, his math section was very different from the regular blue book sections. I guess they were testing out the new math section on his test. He said he filled in random bubbles for that section but ended up with a stellar score over all. I only hope that do something like that for the June test!</p>

<ol>
<li><p>No</p></li>
<li><p>Yes</p></li>
<li><p>Yes, and those questions have been excised and not counted towards scores. Hasn’t happened in a while, though.</p></li>
</ol>