<p>Thr question was something along the lines of…puritans came to mass bay for all of the reasons EXCEPT which is why I put unemployment</p>
<p>I hope that makes sense lol @IlariaCaelestis </p>
<p>@julesrulesx3 Around the time of the Great Migration, there was a huge wool problem in various areas of England, all of them Puritan-populated. Hence the unemployment option.</p>
<p>@julesrulesx3 oh that one. I put it was that they didn’t leave to join established communities in mass bay because there were none</p>
<p>@ckoepp127 wow that’s specific… I have never seen that mentioned in my review books, but I think you’re right. Thanks!</p>
<p>What was the answer to the question w black and white percentages on the map?
I can’t remember my answer</p>
<p>@meaa7130 I don’t believe #14 on your list is correct. It should be canals.</p>
<p>@meaa7130 I said equal chance of wealth for #3 bc native americans were not miners</p>
<p>new doc due to the ■■■■■: <a href=“https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ORfojRfiVP9BLm81Uaf2-q5lb2PlCGujJ8Ox880A928/edit”>https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ORfojRfiVP9BLm81Uaf2-q5lb2PlCGujJ8Ox880A928/edit</a></p>
<p>@julesrulesx3 That isn’t true… they took part in the mining too</p>
<p>sorry guys, the link doesn’t work anymore. the ■■■■■ destoryed it.</p>
<p>Wow actually correction, it wasn’t a cotton problem it was a wheat problem…lol cotton wasn’t a thing in England, duh. My bad. Anyways, I think I said the strongest secessionist states had the highest amounts of slaves</p>
<p>I’m looking online and it says chinese mexicans and blacks mined…I can see why equal chance would be wrong bc of discriminationhough</p>
<p>@ckoepp127 do u happen to remember the other choices? </p>
<p>Bro, there is a site reasonprep.com and it is just wonderful. It will prepare you for SAT!
Best of luck</p>
<p>@julesrulesx3 not very well, no. One about slaves only mattering in cotton-growing states, maybe one about a growing number of whites.</p>
<p>Do you think the curve -12=800 on the doc is accurate? I’m trying to figure out what the curve might be like</p>
<p>That sounds a little high… SAT US History is not curved very much. In the official CB review book, the curves were around -9 or -7=800. Then again, I thought those tests were easier. </p>
<p>Since this test was supposedly easy, does that mean the next test in October will be hard?</p>
<p>Is it canals or railroads?
Also city beautiful or settlement house movement for the quote? </p>