Order of Difficulty on Writing Section

<p>Are the grammar questions arranged in order of difficulty. Barrons says yes, Princeton no, Kaplan no, and Thompson Peterson yes...</p>

<p>I could be very helpful, for example, if you are tempted to put no error on a hard problem (late in section) but know its hard so you put down another answer because you think it could be the mistake and you just forgot the rule (an obscure rule like the american english jury is vs. brit english jury are...).</p>

<p>Maybe its only for usage questions and not for sentence corrections. Obviously there is no order to paragraph ?s, similar to critical reading</p>

<p>Any answers would be nice. Can you back it up, because the sources differ on this issue...Personal experience I guess would be best...</p>

<p>Besides that I am just angry at the math curve (2 wrong = 720 grr)</p>

<p>I also want to know - in europe do they say France is winning but say the French team are winning (until the headbutt incident)?</p>

<p>I think so. Not as a rule like quesiton 10 is always going to be easier than 11, but its a trend.</p>

<p>Yes, there is a rough order of difficulty on the Writing MC section, progressing from easy to medium to hard. It appears that medium questions abound, followed by easy questions, with the hard questions being the rarest on the actual exam (the Official Study Guide exams do not seem to be quite representative of the difficulty of the actual exams -- the questions seem to be a bit easier overall).</p>

<p>So are the tests in the blue book actually harder or easier than the actual test?</p>

<p>virtuoso,</p>

<p>The CR sections are definitely easier, the Writing sections are slightly easier, and the Math sections are probably about the same level of difficulty.</p>

<p>Hmm, I always find its the environment that changes. Just having a smaller chair and desk (More uncomfortable) for 4 hours seems to make a difference. However, I didn't on my APs, so I'm hopeful...</p>

<p>Godot are you serious? The questions in the bluebook are easier?</p>

<p>Personally, I feel CR and Math are about the same. Writing sections I am wary of. Both times I took the test, the writing sections were significantly harder than the questions in the blue book. I was getting like 67-77 in the blue book and got a 60 on the actual test for grammar subscore.</p>

<p>personally the practice tests from collegeboard i get are usually 30 points above or lower usually above than my actual score. So its not THAT much easier.</p>

<p>I find the CR in the blue book much harder than the CR is Kaplan's so does that mean that Kaplan is not representative, and if not which other books practice tests are representative of the real CR (Grubber's PR, peterson's, Barron's or what?)</p>