<p>a far as the curve is concerned, n=even if nobody got a 2400 for this SAT there would be no changes to the curve… they are all predetermined. Experimental sections are used for “equating” (something to do with the curve)</p>
<p>Do you guys think the math curve would be slightly more lenient?</p>
<p>Im guessing the</p>
<p>1) box/tracing problem where the answer = 18
2) line problem where the answer was 3
3) fish problem (especially this)</p>
<p>would have stumped many people.</p>
<p>@humbugs people that got 800s in cr missed 2. For math people were getting 800 780 760 750!!! That’s freakin amazing!!! And for writing -3 with an 11 essay was still an 800!</p>
<p>I feel like the math curve should be pretty harsh, actually. I was really stumped on the January sat for math and this one was a breeze comparatively. CR was not so good this time though haha</p>
<p>But if the intuition one is right then isn’t unverifiable wrong? I give up on life these answer choices were so loop hole-y</p>
<p>^ The SAT Theory of infinite complexity</p>
<p>rate on a scale of 5 5 being the hardest and 1 being the easiest. CR gets a solid 3.5 maybe a 4. the vocab was good but everything else i wasn’t really big fan of, math gets a 3/5 for me (I’m very poor at SAT math) and writing gets a 1.5/5 the prompt was good and the questions were relatively easy. i know i got the galaxy one wrong and the baboon one as well,</p>
<p>I would literally smash my computer not to take the SAT again and get a 2250(or higher) on this try (June) … studying for the SAT has no guarantees of improving your score when you’re at the 2100+ range and theres only so much practice material %-( </p>
<p>Are we sure the answer to that was 18 because I swear I got 14 and I was wearing my glasses!! Other people say they got 14 too but others are dead set on 18 as well. That was the only math question that weirded me out a bit. I wish I focused on it longer because it’s all a blur now </p>
<p>I wonder why so many people had trouble with the maze problem. It was just following the arrows, right? I thought the math was pretty average, but that’s just me. </p>
<p>@Jellybae -3 11 writing?!? wow that’s an awesome as heck curve </p>
<p>@humbugs people could’ve been like “Oh hey, I forgot to realize there were small arrows … and I forgot to follow those arrows.” </p>
<p>I’d give cr a 4/5 simply because of the answer choices. I flip flopped on so many. Math I’d give a 1.5/5 because of those directional squares and that line question (fortunately I guessed correctly!) I’d give writing a ?/5 because ever since march I’ve been having trust issues with my writing scores</p>
<p>@Jellybae It was 18 sorry bb</p>
<p>“Awesome as heck” humbugs u are my fave</p>
<p>Presque you crush my dreams</p>
<p>The maze one was really easy to me lol and i’m really bad at math. follow the arrows. nothing but 18 works. spent good min looking at it. just curious i guessed on about 4 multiple choice math problems and I’m 99.9% sure I got them wrong. In the future, is it better to guess or skip? </p>
<p>i looked at the very first question with the plastic lumber passage and i did sort of a double take, “…um, all these answer choices basically say the same thing” like the answers were a lot closer together than other ones i’ve seen. i figured out their little nuances though </p>
<p>@Jarjarbinks23 lol what are arrows?!</p>
<p>Guess on all the free response but on the mc id only guess if I had a hunch @sat2014 </p>
<p>If only the SAT had always done away with taking off points</p>
<p>@Jellybae its my senior year outlook on life :ar!
@sat2014 my philosophy has always been if you want a high score i.e 2150+ just don’t guess. you lose precious points</p>
<p>@sat2014 carefully calculate in your head whether you will get a multiple of 4 wrong or 3 remainder wrong. if you get 2 remainder wrong you’re scott-free with guessing on that one particular question because it rounds up to the next whole number. remember the rule: if less than three, let it be.</p>
<p>proceed to make a ceremonial crop offering to the SAT gods and chant the sat oath </p>