<p>question is how do you remember the last 3 answer letters u put lol.</p>
<p>haha I think it was C, B, B. or third choice, second choice , second choice. i’m not sure about the last one though.</p>
<p>Sorry guys, but I only read the first 30 pages. </p>
<p>One of the science answers was the X chromosomes right?
I also got 14 A’s on the english section, which isn’t too off of the expected value.</p>
<p>And I noticed a pattern of E, E, D, C, C, B, B, A A on the beginning of the science section.</p>
<p>good point tapman no ones gone over any question on that science passage except for neurons lens cells bs.</p>
<p>@Tappman- I think I had something similar.</p>
<p>I was surprised at the easiness of the math section, but thought that the science section was pretty rough.</p>
<p>lol math section isnt easy when your proctor starts snoring.</p>
<p>I put the x chromosome. The one we had to look at I believe was between two lines which only showed X chromosome… idk. I don’t think y chromosome was anywhere on that experiment, and another one was just far off on graph.</p>
<p>it was x chromosome.</p>
<p>@tappman… I thought the science section only had four choices?</p>
<p>anyone remember any more science questions not discussed yet?</p>
<p>JNeemz, you remember #13? The question asking about molecular mass vs. melting temperature? I had a graph that started low but went upward with positive slope. I switched it last second when checking over some answers. I originally chose the first graph cuz I looked at mass increasing and melting temp decreasing, or something like that, but since temps were negative it may have been switched?</p>
<p>@Theundertaken </p>
<p>Maybe, all I remember is that it was in that pattern, which freaked me out a bit.</p>
<p>for the question in science with which model does not account for the enviroment, was it model 1 and 2?</p>
<p>all the answers were increase only.</p>
<p>Um one asked what two things were at a certain temperature, I said one was a gas cuz it was boiling at that temp.</p>
<p>model 1 and 2 was the answer i chose</p>
<p>I also had model 1 and 2. There was a science question about if something went from solid to liquid, liquid to solid and some other options. Anybody remember that question?</p>
<p>Oy vey–predicting 34+ English/Reading, 27 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>@trustyrusty, i think i put liquid to gas cuz then it gave a temperature where it past the boiling point</p>