<p>multiple choice was very easy, as were the first two free response… but I forgot how to do some of them as well as the rest of the frqs. The frqs were relatively challenging for me; I’m ultimately hoping for a 4.</p>
<p>multiple choice very easy, along with frq’s 1,2,3, and 5. 4 was kind of hard and 6c and d were just really confusing.</p>
<p>I thought the multiple choice was harder than the free response. The FRQs were pretty easy, except 6c and 6d. And 4 was a bit confusing. I’m hoping for a 5, but anticipating a 4.</p>
<p>I think I missed around 8-10 but I think made lots of stupid mistakes…FRQs were pretty brutal too…I’m also hoping for a 5 but anticipating a 4.</p>
<p>My favorite coefficient is 121, just saying.</p>
<p>overall pretty easy. FR4 was a serious pain in the *** but i lold at all the other ones. MC non-calc I was a little pressed for time, MC calc was easier. Should be in 5 territory.</p>
<p>BTW FR6 d was easy as pie once you figure out what the hell they want from you</p>
<p>ok so on #6 they asked for the first four nonzero terms, and me being stupid, put the first four terms that were not zero, but not P4(x). will they take off for this?
Lagrange error bound is also kinda hard but overall i think it was easy although i couldnt complete 2d w/o my calc though lol</p>
<p>I thought almost everything was doable. The only thing that could seriously screw me was the arithmetic on FR, one of them (I won’t say which was really easy to do, but involved lots of multiplying and adding.</p>
<p>I thought number 4 was a bit iffy, and I may have screwed up somewhere on 6…overall it wasn’t all that awful, it just lasted sooooooooo long…I was tired by the end of it.</p>
<p>mc’s were relatively easy, some interesting ones though, I thought. I didn’t do most of frq 1, and I didn’t attempt 6d (since I haven’t learned about Lagrange bounds). Otherwise I answered the rest with confidence. I thought 6c was straightforward, not sure why that hasn’t been the consensus on this thread. </p>
<p>I liked frq’s 4 and 5. But the tea and biscuit one was cute. Thank god it wasn’t a potato. I was having tea while i did that question as a matter of fact.</p>
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<p>I have a question related to this. When one asks for the first n terms of a taylor expansion of f(x) is it possible to have more than n terms (more than n polynomial coefficients)?</p>
<p>When they ask for a “third degree taylor polynomial,” they are looking for an expression with variables (most often x) up to and including degree three. You would keep generating terms, even if it took more than three terms, to reach the third degree.</p>
<p>Omg if everyone felt it was really easy i prob got a 3 sigh…</p>
<p>enfieldacademy, you can drink tea during the test??!!! isnt there any rule prohibit any food or drink? My teacher even took my water bottle away today. :(</p>
<p>hey greedisgood, my favorite coefficient is 121 too! what a coincidence! and I was especially worried because it didn’t seem to be anyone else’s favorite coefficient but I’m glad to have found another like-minded person :)</p>
<p>@meowmeemeow i believe some schools allow drinks</p>
<p>It sucks that I have no idea what this favourite coefficient means.</p>
<p>I think I got killed by the FRQs. MC was iffy, but FRQs were BAD. I thought I might be able to pull off a 5, but I am seriously thinking I’m in the 3 range now…</p>
<p>favorite coefficient?</p>
<p>MC probably should be ok, except the first question I couldn’t add so it took me like 5 minutes lol. Hopefully I didn’t make any other stupid mistakes…</p>
<p>The non-calc FRQs were awful (well 3 and 6)! I can appreciate the creativity/weirdness and I hope I was able to answer them right, but I am one of those people who ‘learn’ by memorizing how to do certain types of problems instead of just being smart enough to actually understand the concepts and apply them to different problems/situations. I just need a four though!</p>