<p>I'm wondering if it's ok to do all the mulitiple choice questions first and then do the True/False/CE ones if there is time left over?</p>
<p>i dont know, but damn that part of the test is hard (hardest IMO)</p>
<p>You can do it however you want...</p>
<p>Of course it's ok to do so. Though I personally find that I tend to make mistakes towards the end of any test, and since the T/F questions aren't necessarily easy I personally wouldn't put them off 'til the end. But whatever works for you.</p>
<p>I'd say that if you want to try it like that, you should take a few practice tests using that technique to get used to it. However, I agree with dolcevalse that you're probably more likely to mess up a bit towards the end.</p>
<p>Is the propensity to mess-up because of fatigue? Or because the questions at the end of the multiple choice section are more difficult?</p>
<p>To me, the T-F-CE questions are 3x more difficult because it's like having to answer three questions in one! Is a T-F-CE question worth the same amount as a multiple choice question?</p>
<p>They're worth the same amount. I don't think they're that hard, unless you get two Ts and it's debatable if it's CE</p>
<p>But yes you can skip around and do them in whatever order you want to</p>
<p>SGP, I think it's true for any test that people tend to make mistakes towards the end due to fatigue. Especially for the SAT Chem exam - 85 questions in 60 minutes! Doesn't leave you much time to breathe, or think thoroughly through many things.</p>
<p>Sigh. I get tripped up on those, marking "false" when the second statement is true but not a valid reason.</p>