<p>well maybe they didn't say "real integers" but i know they put integers somewhere in the question, the word integer just simply didn't pop into my head when i was on this question. Plus, by assuming integers, you need to put more work in to realize that 8.5 cannot be the average of 7 numbers, whereas any individual who's bad at math can simply put all the three answers because they don't know how to find out whether something can be an average of integers or not.</p>
<p>@Gosixers
I don't agree that you need to put less work if it was real numbers. When I solved it, the average can only be 6.5<x<10.5. Therefore, if there was another choice of 11, it would not be possible. (I can show why if anyone wants)</p>
<p>Agree with Von Neumann. The whole thing was putting in the smallest possible unknown values and then the largest possible unknown values and seeing if that created a range wide enough. Took a decent amount of work even with "reals."</p>
<p>After the Test
If you took the black-and-white cover version of the SAT Reasoning Test on Saturday, January 28, 2006, you had one of two section orders. Your test was organized like this:</p>
<p>Essay
Math
Equating (the one that doesn't count toward your score)
Reading
Writing
Math (includes SPR questions)
Reading (includes 2 long passages)
Reading
Math
Writing
OR, like this:</p>
<p>Essay
Math (includes SPR questions)
Writing
Reading (includes 2 long passages)
Equating (the one that doesn't count toward your score)
Math
Reading
Math
Reading
Writing
If you took the pink cover version of the SAT Reasoning Test on Saturday, January 28, 2006, you had one of two section orders. Your test was organized like this:</p>
<p>Essay
Math
Reading
Writing
Math (includes SPR questions)
Reading (includes 2 long passages)
Reading
Math
Writing
OR, like this:</p>
<p>Essay
Math (includes SPR questions)
Writing
Reading (includes 2 long passages)
Math
Reading
Math
Reading
Writing
If you took the black-and-white cover version of the SAT Reasoning Test on Sunday, January 29, 2006, your test was organized like this:</p>
<p>Essay
Equating (the one that doesn't count toward your score)
Reading (including 2 long passages)
Math
Writing
Math (includes SPR questions)
Reading
Math
Reading
Writing
If you took the pink cover version of the SAT Reasoning Test on Sunday, January 29, 2006, your test was organized like this:</p>
<p>Essay
Reading (including 2 long passages)
Math
Writing
Math (includes SPR questions)
Reading
Math
Reading
Writing</p>
<p>"but i know they put integers somewhere in the question"</p>
<p>no they didn't. i read the question like five times..</p>
<p>No one thinks my discovery is valuable? You can check this thread and will get astonished: <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=68797&highlight=June+SAT%5B/url%5D">http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=68797&highlight=June+SAT</a></p>
<p>@HiLine, I browsed that thread and didn't find any similarities with this test.</p>
<p>Have you checked page 12? Did you have a passage on extraterrestrial lives?</p>
<p>Excuse me HiLine, you were probably talking about porcupine passage. It is not news to me that they use the same questions. ETS has done this in APs and SAT 2's for years anyway. They also use the same exam from June Saturday testing, for example, for December Sunday testing.</p>
<p>The problem is:my friend said she got the same 3 CR sections! Isn't that extraordinary?</p>
<p>@HiLine
We had two passages on extraterrestrial lives, but they were discussing Fermi's paradox, and the passage that you are referring to seems different.</p>
<p>@HiLine, did your friend take one of the tests on Sunday and the other on Saturday, or in different places?</p>
<p>No,she took both on Saturdays.I took the Saturday June SAT ,too and still remember a little bit about the passages.</p>
<p>maybe the passages were the same, but questions were different. I don't think that they are similar to those questions that were discussed in that June thread.</p>
<p>Sorry,I confess that I was mistaken:the US people took another version of the June test.</p>
<p>is there a verbal section with 25 questions???????</p>
<p>Regularly no.</p>
<p>nope...I realized that had to be a fake and I just didn't do it. It turned out to be the experimental.</p>
<p>merudh123,you were amazingly smart.</p>
<p>the illusion section has 25 questions?</p>