<p>tokenadult thanks for the advices !</p>
<p>tokenadult,
do you know if test-takers can order their tests to see what mistakes they made ?</p>
<p>does anyone know how to do the problem were they gave you a whole bunch of cosines of angles and the law of cosines and asked you to solve for a certain side. it looked tough and i ran out of time, so I guessed. what did you all put?</p>
<p>anyone know what I'm talking about?</p>
<p>no sorry i totally guessed on that one. It was one of my 4 that i skipped and i didnt have time to try to work it so i randomly guessed</p>
<p>I haven't found anything on ACT's Web site like the College Board service that lets you see your actual answers on some SAT I tests, but I'm still getting used to that site. Browse around there, and maybe you will find it before I do.</p>
<p>I remember it, but not what I put. It wasn't bad, though... you just had to solve for an angle and plug everything into the formula.</p>
<p>BTW, are you sure we're allowed to discuss specific answers/test questions? My proctor said something about not talking about the questions after the test... but then again, she also said we had 30 minutes for science (I was about to have a heart attack) and that we didn't have to sign that statement on pg 2.</p>
<p>haha. yeah we are fine to talk about it. I think you just had to wait till noon the next day or something like that...long passed. wow your proctor sounds like a dim-wit.</p>
<p>Heh, at least she listened when I said we needed 35 minutes.
Anyway, for those problem questions I've been seeing, I got</p>
<p>foreshadowing, authority, protective
definitely read the DNA from bottom up (was in the passage)
atcg was 2, I think. ggaa c, (not sure of that one, but it
worked out nicely once you figured out how to read it)
develop
asymptote intersection (-2,3). The equation was with (x+2)^2 - (y-3)^2 right? Anyway, it was a hyperbola with the form (x-h)^2 /a^2 - (y-k)^2/b^2 = 1. The intersection of the asymptotes is at the center (h,k).</p>
<p>Also, for the description of the lake, did y'all put it after the 2nd paragraph (after "The air smelled of cedar" or whatever) or the 4th ("The sky was blue")?</p>
<p>no, the answer was (2,-3) for that one. I think u probably dont rmr the equation. You have it reversed</p>
<p>btw, explain the question with the law of cosines. I dont rmr that.</p>
<p>Oh yeah, how many Cs were there for that DNA problem because I put all Cs (time constraints)</p>
<p>I agree. It was (2,-3).</p>
<p>pentasa, were there any Cs in the DNA problem?</p>
<p>haha, I can't remember that much. but if you read the gels from the bottom up, that basically covers that section.</p>
<p>because of time, i had to put all Cs/Hs on that lol</p>
<p>Btw, on the very last problem about the solid and liquid...what was the answer? It was like a yes..... or no..... question</p>
<p>A,b,c, or d?</p>
<p>I'm worried. They are very unforgiving with the science</p>
<p>Oh yeah, I know what your talking about. </p>
<p>"a scientist makes the statement that at a pressure of 10,000 atm, it is always a liquid. Is this statement correct?" </p>
<p>And the answer was:
No, even at 10,000 atm, it is a solid over 28 degrees Celsius. </p>
<p>I can't remember what letter that answer was (i'm thinking... a)</p>
<p>crap, I may have had it reversed. So it could be liquid instead of solid in the answer choice. haha sry</p>
<p>How about the English question about Ms. Steward. When is it was like, She decided to eat the cow (not sure what animal it was) she shot the previous day. </p>
<p>Was the answer the previous day or yesterday?</p>
<p>the previous day</p>
<p>Scores are supposed to come out online next week. What's the best time to go look (I'm assuming they have server problems)?</p>
<p>I don't think they'll have server problems, since they make you pay $8 a look...</p>
<p>hey kno wuts funny? for my ACT i paid 8 bucks to sneak a peek, and then i closed it... and my parents didnt see. so i paid 8 more to see again. this time i printed off copies and kept it up for a LONG time lol</p>