<p>What was the answer of the math question that was like: You have the digits 3, 4, 5, how many numbers can you make? or something like that?</p>
<p>Honestly, I don’t think we will ever reach a consensus for this question or the one about payphones.</p>
<p>@BioBoy97 I believe the answer was 6. I used permutation to get to that answer. Was that the right thing to do?</p>
<p>@BioBoy97 The answer was 6 (3<em>2</em>1).</p>
<p>@riverseden That’s what I think I got, but I don’t know if its 6 or not. Could digits be repeated? If digits could be repeated, then I think the answer would have been 27. </p>
<p>Can anyone predict my scores for this one? (worst and best case)</p>
<p>CR: 1 - 3 wrong
MATH: 0 wrong
WRITING: 3 blank, 1 wrong (being conservative) with an 11 - 12 essay (I used very good examples, almost pre-wrote my essay in a sense). </p>
<p>BTW, some of the predictions are sooo wrong for this thread. My friends (2 of them) both missed 5 and omitted 1 on the JANUARY SAT (which was notoriously easy) and both got 710’s for CR. The March CR was undoubtedly much harder, just pointing that out. </p>
<p>is this even legal?</p>
<p>Would love it if someone could predict mine. It’s not gonna be as good as most of yours.
Math- 13 blank (ran out of time on each section) and maybe 4 or 5 wrong (some of which would probably be grid-ins)
CR- 1 blank and maybe 3 or 4 wrong
Writing- None blank and maybe 3 or 4 wrong</p>
<p>I only recall the instructions saying not to discuss the essay question, but I may be wrong.</p>
<p>@JavaCoco If you really had 13 blanks (and not 1 - 3 blanks) and 4 to 5 wrong, I would say cancel your score. That math score will drag down any good scores you have in CR and in W. However, I will be going under the assumption that you meant 1 - 3 blank and 4 to 5 wrong.</p>
<p>Math - 670 to 680
CR - 750 to 770
W - 710 with a 10 essay, 730 to 740 with an 11 essay, and 740 to 750 with a 12 essay</p>
<p>@BioBoy97 Hopefully not. I assumed the numbers couldn’t be repeated. But then again, I don’t think 27 was even an option. That was a multiple choice question if I’m not mistaken.</p>
<p>@avc118 I guess it’s not exactly permitted because I think they said you couldn’t discuss the test but I’m not sure that it’s illegal.</p>
<p>@themasterOG, well do you have the exact problem? I might’ve picked 2…</p>
<p>The question gave you a scatter plot with the percentages of students who got an A, B, C, D, or F for two exams. It then asked you how many more students passed exam 2 than exam 1 given that 40 students took the test.</p>
<p>Canceling seems a bit silly… I’m not trying to get into super competitive schools. I’d be perfectly happy with a 2000. And 13 is right. Not 1-3.</p>
<p>So I looked it up on the Collegeboard website and it says, “Sharing of test questions or answers is prohibited at any time. Never give questions or answers to anyone or discuss them by any means (e.g., email, text message, exchange via the Internet, or any other form of communication). There is never any point in time at which you are allowed to discuss exam content unless it is released as part of a College Board service”</p>
<p>Then at the bottom it says, “Legal action may be taken against test- takers who violate applicable laws.”</p>
<p>Then I guess it’s illegal to do this?</p>
<p>@avc118</p>
<p>take note of how long CC has been active and how many SAT tests have been taken during that span. There’s usually a thread for every SAT and pretty much every major SAT Subject test each and every month. There’s also AP tests that always have a thread too.</p>
<p>Collegeboard knows it’s happening.</p>
<p>@riverseden I put 2 for that… i think</p>
<p>Same. I originally put 5 but then I realized that they mentioned 40 students and asked about the amount of students and not the percentage of students.</p>
<p>If i get 0 wrong and 1 omit on math section, whats my score???</p>
<p>Can someone predict my score (being conservative)
4-5 wrong- Math
4-5 wrong w/ 8 essay- writing
12-13 wrong - Critical reading</p>