*OFFICIAL PSAT THREAD 2014 (US)*

<p>For cr sentence completion was the right answer thwart… Expedited?</p>

<p>Did any of you remember the answer to the Bonnie and Clyde question?</p>

<p>@austin23‌ That’s what I put. thwarted… expedited. But is it right?</p>

<p>doctors…altruism</p>

<p>No it was obstruct…hinder</p>

<p>and for “simply” i put plainly anyone else agree?</p>

<p>ya definintiely obstruct…hinder for one of them</p>

<p>Does anyone have any questions on the PSAT whatsoever? I’m sure I can answer almost any question you have after discussing the test with a lot of people :).</p>

<p>@yoohooaddict I think the 2nd space asked for something that meant slowed or hindered, so it couldn’t be expedited…not sure. </p>

<p>Could someone link me the google doc too please?</p>

<p>Also, does anyone have any predictions on the curve? I thought the CR/W were pretty standard (though looking back I got 1 or 2 wrong on the writing), but the math was really rough.</p>

<p>Link Plz?</p>

<p>Could somebody link me the google doc also? I’ll be happy to help distribute afterwards</p>

<p>number 13 :slight_smile: the one for dolphin passages that was like how is passage 1 different from 2…either personal experiences or potential objections</p>

<p>Can anyone guess my score please?
CR: -4
Wr: -1
Math:-1
thanks!</p>

<p>I heard from a lot of people that the math portion was tough. I missed 1 (the one with the roman numerals 2 and 8), and I’m sure many other students did as well.
As for the Writing portion, it was fairly trivial and should have no substantial curve.
The Critical Reading is generally agreed to be harder than on average.
And I got obstructed, hindered as well.</p>

<p>personal experiences</p>

<p>IS THERE EVEN A GOOGLE DOC</p>

<p>^I agree. The guy related personal experiences to the reader by providing his own personal experience with training dolphins and how using the positive reinforcement technique helped him.</p>

<p>can anyone refresh me about the ‘chinese/no answer’ question? not sure if I remember it. </p>

<p>it’s a logical fallacy for the chinese question.</p>