<p>It was student one lol, he literally described what a combustion reaction is.</p>
<p>Student 4 had a better explanation, in my opinion</p>
<p>@testtaker09 If you thought that the trig sum and differences identities were needed, you were not doing the question the right way.</p>
<p>why did they place the shrubs so close to each other???</p>
<p>Please type in COMBUSTION REACTION CANDLE to Google and click on the first entry.
I’m surprised people didn’t have problems with the springs passage. Some basic background in physics would have really helped.</p>
<p>Just in general, science was hard, Really tricky questions… Quite confusing. Some questions could be answered two different ways depending on what you were taught. I’m expecting a generous curve. </p>
<p>I wouldn’t count on a generous curve. The October test was much harder than this one and there wasn’t a generous curve</p>
<p>Hey guys, my friend took the december 2013 ACT and he showed me what the curve was. Do you think it would be a violation if I share it with you guys? And btw, the science curve is extremely generous for this test.</p>
<p>Have they ever had a generous curve?</p>
<p>@racksonracks December 2013 and December 2014 aren’t the same tests</p>
<p>@captjack I know, but people were asking if there has ever been a generous curve and what would be reasonable to expect.</p>
<p>Just do it, they haven’t said that in their rules about the act discussion on here </p>
<p>Share it</p>
<p>Guys go on the website act quantum it has curves of previous tests</p>
<p>Yes</p>
<p>It was the a+b one and I forgot the formula, but they should have given you that because that’s something you learn in prelacy</p>
<p>*precalc</p>
<p>For those of you wondering about curves…
ACT has usually pre-determined the curve prior to administering the test. The ACT we took was given to a group of high schoolers whose ACT scores are already known. Those students’ scores allow ACT to set the curve for the test.
When we actually take the test, ACT may make some curve modifications if the results do not agree with the preset curve. However, if the entire ACT had been given before, the curve will not change.
Our science test will probably end up like this:
39-40; 36
37-38
36
35
34</p>
<p>@1golfer1 yes you had to have know the cos (a + b ) formula because it was not given. I forgot it while I was taking the test, but I learned it this year and I am in Honors Precalc. I took the ACT three times, including yesterday, and received a 33 in Math on the October 2014 test and I have used every book for ACT prep and I have never seen a problem like that one anywhere. </p>
<p>@1golfer1 I think if you get one wrong on math, you can still get a 36 because that problem is not basic trig</p>