<p>I thought there was only one SAT version but the sections you took with your neighbor were different at times... how is it even fair to have two different tests?</p>
<p>How is that unfair? Haha.</p>
<p>The SAT is standardized, so each version technically has the same difficulty (otherwise it wouldn’t be standardized). Although you would probably do better on one or the other, when it’s given to several thousand people, the average scores for the two versions would probably be within one point of each other.</p>
<p>that’s unfair in the sense that i can get a 800 on the math of one but miss a question on another one and get a 770. that’s 30 points. everyone should be taking the same test under the same conditions. for example, when i read about the “funny stories” i was surprised to hear about people taking the test while there was construction outside. how absurd is that?</p>