<p>To: Thanksknow</p>
<p>Math - 670 - 700 (In Oct I got 1 wrong in Math and my score was 770)
Writing - 690 - 710
CR - 630 - 660 </p>
<p>All the best… Hope you will get better score…</p>
<p>To: Thanksknow</p>
<p>Math - 670 - 700 (In Oct I got 1 wrong in Math and my score was 770)
Writing - 690 - 710
CR - 630 - 660 </p>
<p>All the best… Hope you will get better score…</p>
<p>What did you guys get for the problem on the ant passage? The question was along the lines of: what is the author insinuating about human societies? </p>
<p>^Differently structured I think</p>
<p>For that math question that had a graph about students was the answer 5 or 2? I put 5 but was that percentages? Did it really say 40 students? </p>
<p>what happened to the google doc</p>
<p>It was 2</p>
<p>it was public now private?</p>
<p>Is there a consensus on the pay phone problem (using had or not) and what was the answer to the to the question that would attack the validity of the Bijah passage?</p>
<p>Im convinced payphone was without had</p>
<p>Nope the correct answer was with had it’s the only one that made the 2 parts of the sentence logically parallel all the other ones had something wrong with them</p>
<p>It’s definitely “had”. It makes sense if you think about it. </p>
<p>Hmm. Actually had is incorrect. I’ll try to get back to my SAT test tutors soon, but they said that they’ve seen these types of problems before and the version without had is incorrect. </p>
<p>For the Bijah one, did people get wife and kids disappearing as one of their answers???</p>
<p>@yankees7210 It was either that or the one asking why Bijah stayed in Deerfield when he was supposed to be in the new town. </p>
<p>My SAT tutor chose the latter of the two options and explained it to me like this:</p>
<p>The passage is supposing that Bijah was leaving periodically to the new town, so asking why Bihar stayed would be the most logical and supported question to ask the author to attack his hypothesis on the story. Personally, I don’t agree with this.</p>
<p>I really hope its the one with the wife and kids</p>
<p>@Lanie 49 yes the answer was 2</p>
<p>@Hawkace, the more I think about it the less the choice with “had” makes sense lol</p>
<p>Was the section with the congresswoman’s speech on nixon’s impeachment experimental?</p>
<p>“have become” has to be consistent with “had”. We’ll see when the scores come out. </p>
<p>It wasn’t have become tho, it was are becoming.</p>