OCT. 2006 SAT Equating Sections

<p>50.5%, settled in the official math thread.</p>

<p>could the nixon passage also have been section 3?</p>

<p>did anyone get the section where it had a passage 1 contrasting with passage 2 about voting. the writer of passage 1 claimed that the voters were all erratic and stupid while passage 2 claimed that the voters were better considered as a public whole. anyone have that section?</p>

<p>boingy - yeah I did, but what were the other passages from that section?</p>

<p>does anyone know if the sibling/daria(math) and the teacher/book questions(math) were in the equating section?</p>

<p>I had the daria one and I only had 3 math sects, and I'm pretty sure the walden one wasn't an equating one either</p>

<p>anybody remember some questions from sec 3 writing (experimental)?</p>

<p>does anyone know if the sibling/daria(math) and the teacher/book questions(math) were in the equating section?</p>

<p>!!!
(10 chars.)</p>

<p>it sounds like everybody have the african section so it couldn't be the equating one. But I'm sure for my test, my experimental section is a CR one.</p>

<p>I'm sure I had an experimental CR - So many freaking vocab & passages in a row for the first half of the test</p>

<p>Did anyone have a passage like fiction/nonfiction writers and how the tape recorder devalues journalism because it changes the way dialogue is written.</p>

<p>what is one question that was part of the experimental math section?</p>

<p>i haven't read anything definitive yet about what section was math exp.</p>

<p>so i'm still pulling for the pyramid one. XD</p>

<p>i believe i had a reading exp. anyone know if it was the mona lisa passage one?</p>

<p>mona lisa was not experimental.
some of the other non-experimental reading passages were:
the african one
walden
nature and citys
shirley keeldar and her uncle- victorian passage about marriage
um, those are the one's I can remember right now.</p>

<p>on the collegeboard website, there is spr next to some math section. What does that mean?</p>

<p>those are the grid-in questions.</p>