<p>This is a really stupid question: can you choose to take either E or M, or do you have to take both? Which one is supposedly easier and if you take both, do you get two separate scores and do they count as two scores or one?</p>
<p>You cannot take both, you have to choose one. The supposedly easier one is E, but it purportedly has a weaker curve, so it really falls down to personal strengths and weaknesses. I thought that M was a cakewalk, and my strengths are in E really, but I took M on the recommendation of a friend.</p>
<p>i took E
M section is soooo difficult for me</p>
<p>For me, I find M to be a lot easier than E. I took practice tests and consistently did better on M so I took that and got a 790 on it. Sn 800 on the M section, however, is a lower percentile than E( I think 800 on E is 98% but 800 M is 96%.) I dont really know if that means that M is easier because the Math II is harder than the Math I but Math II has a lower percentile for 800.</p>
<p>that would mean the barron's curve is messed up then, no?
a 770 on Bio-E is a 750 on Bio-M for the practice tests if i'm not mistaken..</p>
<p>What are the main things tested in Bio E? Bio M?</p>
<p>Anyone know the main differences between E & M, and which one is "easier" to get a higher score on?</p>
<p>The main differences between E and M are the fact that the questions are about different subjects... What kind of question is that? E is about ecology, M is about molecular biology.</p>
<p>It is easier to get a higher score on the one that you are better at. What did you expect us to say? Something like its easier to get an 800 on E because CB hates all bio M test takers?</p>
<p>The princeton review and barron's practice tests all combine the E and M test into one and call it E/M. Am I missing something? Do you specifically get to choose during the test?</p>
<p>Yes. The first set of questions are for both the Bio E and Bio M exams, and then the next set, the questions are specifically for either Bio E or Bio M, and you mark which one you want to take.</p>
<p>so is that the same with the real SAT test? Do you get both E and M questions for the first part?</p>