<p>This test was easy for me, but definitely still harder than I thought it would be. I’m predicting a slightly more lenient curve.</p>
<p>i think i got this wrong but for the last question of that experiment i got the difference in duration if the malaria was because it affected different tissues… -_-</p>
<p>yeah…i dunno I said it depended on the age or something like that…</p>
<p>I think it had something to do with the age… You couldn’t say tissues because the experiment never said anything about tissues. But don’t worry, I think you all did fine. :)</p>
<p>do you think the m curve will be lenient this time?
im really worried
i ran out of time and i skipped 8</p>
<p>Well, I took the E…but I think the M might’ve been harder, so maybe</p>
<p>i cant believe this is 45 pages…</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure biology m was the hardest test in a while, it was even harder than Barron’s practice tests, which are supposedly the hardest</p>
<p>@Christine, is that a lot or not enough?</p>
<p>i started this 45 page thread</p>
<p>I just found the test questions to be so horribly unbalanced.</p>
<p>Everyone: what is your prediction for what the curve will be?</p>
<p>for E: minus 1 or 2 for 800
for M: seems like it was towards the harder side, so maybe minus 3 or 4?</p>
<p>what was the answer for the proportional thymine question?
was it the evolution answer?</p>
<p>what was the exact question?</p>
<p>it was on the m it was something like if someone has thymine in a similar proportion to someone else what can you conclude?
i dont remember clearly
someone taking m would recognize it</p>
<p>I think the correct answer stated something regarding the amount of G and C.</p>
<p>idont remember
but it asked something like if an individual has thymine proportional with another individuals, then what can you conclude? or something like that… lOL someone who took m help me out</p>
<p>i thought it was the evolution answer like they are only related in evolutionary terms because proportional doesnt necessarily mean same amount of g and c does it?</p>
<p>That question was tricky. It told you the ** percent ** of T. An organism could have a completely different sequence with the same amount of T nucleotides. The only thing you can infer was the ratio of the other nucleotides.</p>