<p>Did anyone else think math was harder than usual? Last time I took it I got a 36 on that section…but this time, well, we’ll see, won’t we.</p>
<p>i’m pretty sure hawthorne sensed a “pattern” that he’d seen earlier / something familiar in a different location… something like that - this passage was so fun to read!</p>
<p>i think the reading section is extremely easy IF you enjoy the passages. usually, i do the social sci last since i can’t read it well, but i guess i got lucky with this one!</p>
<p>Oy vey–predicting 34+ English/Reading, 26 math and 31 science</p>
<p>And yes, the answer to the science question was definitely neurons. Cells don’t transmit that kind of energy. It’s an electrochemical impulse (and therefore facilitated by neurons). Pretty sure you just have to have the background knowledge to answer it.</p>
<p>I agree with you @ernestjohn. It makes sense that he was looking at the past and remembering something from the past that triggered his mind. </p>
<p>What did everyone get for the first reading passage. There was one unclear question to me of who the girl was playing with at the park. Was it the d street gang?</p>
<p>^ Yeah it was.</p>
<p>The question asked what a specific psychologists interpretation of what happened to Hawthorne not what our interpretation is. The scientist named was the same one that coined the seizure theory. Therefore Hawthorne most likely had a small seizure if we look at it from the perspective of the scientist named.</p>
<p>^ That is incorrect.
Hawthorne had an experience in where he perceived that he had falsely seen the place before. A memory theory principle.</p>
<p>I’m wondering about a few still</p>
<p>1) The math question with intersecting lines forming 4 angles out of 180* and the other 180* left empty. What is <DFC (which was 47) + one of the other angles. I said 94.</p>
<p>2) about the euro games, in the last few sentence, “which of the following, if true, conveys the idea in the first part of the sentence”. </p>
<p>The first part of the sentence was about “euro games are spreading around america and other parts of the world”…I said leave as “thanks to internet”</p>
<p>@augustus1 – What letter answer was neurons?</p>
<p>this is the one reading question i was unsure about:</p>
<p>the passage said “what is up with”</p>
<p>the choices were: what is it with …what is with… what is it about…</p>
<p>following the underlined area it said something like “dolphins and sharks swimming that set fear into people” or something </p>
<p>what’s the answer?!
thanks!</p>
<p>Correct: What is it about. The rest were slang.</p>
<p>And I left the thing about the euro games expanding due to the internet too.</p>
<p>I agree with touhou about Hawthorne reflecting on something earlier in his life. </p>
<p>For the math tax question, where people said it was 160,000, to find that answer, did we have to kinda guess between 150,000 to 180,000 or something because it was between those numbers or something? I completely forgot what I put down as an answer, but I think that’s what I did to find my answer.</p>
<p>Also for the median question, was 3 answer C? Or the one after 2?</p>
<p>It was a brief seizure! The reason is because they said in the perspective of one scientist. I spent about a min on the question</p>
<p>darn i had what is it about and then changed it…</p>
<p>Read the sentence! You’d get the answer right away</p>
<p>for the question with animals and human characteristics, did the answer like have fascination or something in it?</p>
<p>That was tough. Don’t think it said fascination tho</p>
<p>a reading question, what best conveys about a naturalist or something? what did u guys say?</p>
<p>Soccersr, Hawthorne connected with the familiarity of the room. I don’t know what made you believe he had a brief seizure.</p>
<p>the answer to that was a memory principle for sure. Because the passage stated somewhere that there were those chairs in his grandmother’s dinner room or something.</p>