<p>Could a raw of 40 still be 750+?</p>
<p>@Ninjafro: I’d think so because on an “easy” test, the curve is 44-45=800. On a “harder” one, it could be ~42 = 800, so I’d assume that 40 would be a 750+</p>
<p>@chewydog Would this be considered an “easy” test or a “hard” test then?</p>
<p>anyone wana make a consolidated list of answers?</p>
<p>I thought this one was harder at the end! But the curve takes everyone into account, and I’m not everyone lol.</p>
<p>@chewy: Thanks. I will jump for joy if I can manage to get a 750+. </p>
<p>My school district literally does nothing for students that have any sort of interest or aptitude for mathematics, so I’ve had to teach myself everything that I know. x.x It’s all very stressful.</p>
<p>3x: Don’t remember the question, but the answer was like 599.7 or something
3x: Indiana/Lake County -> 0.32
3x: Prime numbers/2k + 1 -> 2 is a prime number
3x: The weird function that had a horizontal asymptote and exponents like -2x -> one intersection
3x: The trig question with ST/SR -> tany or something… I don’t remember exactly what it was but you had to use similar triangles to solve it
3x: “Length of chord BC” -> 15.3
3x: Distance between cars -> 60
4x: Double of one root in the equation x^2 - 24x + c (c was 128 I think) -> 16
4x: Area of rectangle created under the sine curve -> ~1.1
4x: f(x) = g(x)(x-2) + r -> f(2)
49: 19th term</p>
<p>@MalikaPotter: I personally felt that it was on the more difficult side, but that might be because I took the Chemistry one first so my brain was already a bit tired and I prepared using Barron’s practice tests which were nothing like today’s. </p>
<p>@Ninja: Haha, so will I. It sucks that you like math while your school doesn’t help though, how did you manage it?</p>
<p>anyone remember the first question? was that 123? choice D?</p>
<p>@stevenydc - All I remember was that it was D lol </p>
<p>Was it something with exponents?</p>
<p>6 omit 3 wrong so far
What’s that like a 760?</p>
<p>@btbam1…wait, what was question 49 about? i feel like i accidentally skipped a couple of questions.</p>
<p>@Chewy: I pretty much looked into every topic that my math classes overlooked and practiced them until I thought I had understood them. Of course, I obviously missed a few things. XD</p>
<p>My school district is pretty ridiculous. Most districts do geometry in 8th grade, but I’m going to be a senior next year, and just last year I had geometry.</p>
<p>for the one with the number of times f(x)=0, and the equation had exponents like (something)^(-2x), what did you guys get? i got 2 but i think thats wrong, i just graphed it though and zoomed in. Did that have any restrictions on it like x had to be greater than zero or something?</p>
<p>metalliyanks123…no…ur raw score is 40 only…</p>
<p>@jessicagu93 - 49 was something like “In a series every even number n is 2 and every odd number is n divided by 7. Which is equal to n=5?” 5/7 has a remainder of 5, and 19/7 has a remainder of 5, so it’s 19.</p>
<p>abc12311…i cant remember that one…</p>
<p>anyone remember the one talking about an object rise and fall…
it gave a table for that…
(i skipped that one cuz i dont know how to use the calculator to do that…■■■…)</p>
<p>@UniversalPB - Also, you could’ve compared the decimal places </p>
<p>5/7 = 0.7142857…
19/7 = 2.7142857…</p>
<p>The other choices were 10, 12, 21, 35.</p>
<p>10 and 12 are even, ruling them out completely, and 21 and 35 are both divisible by 7.</p>
<p>@stevenydc - For that one, I inputted the values in my GDC and use a quadratic regression, the function was like f(x) = -5.5x^2 something something, and then could equate it to zero and solve. Don’t remember the answer though.</p>
<p>universalPB, but 12 is also right…i thought 19 tooso i skipped that one</p>
<p>■■ youa re right 12 is even!!!fkfkfkfkfkfkfkfkfkfk</p>