<p>Actually, little do most people know, each SAT has a secret code built into the answers. If you get the first 5-6 right in the section, it should only take you 10-15 minutes to crack the rest of the code. In June 2007, they used the Fibonacci Sequence (alphabetical with the usual encoding exclusions, of course) for most of the Writing section, but it was too obvious; that’s why so many people got 760-800 on the June 2007 Writing. But there is suspicion that people knew ahead of time because a North Korean stole the code.</p>
<p>I was able to crack my last Reading one (ha, and who says Tuvaluan history never came in handy), but screwed up the code on one of the math sections. For the essay, I went with the ol’ binary bypass, but the computer picked up the 874th 0 as an O, so I didn’t get a 12.</p>