Question

<p>Guys, just wondering how you file a test question complaint to Collegeboard. Does anyone know the way?</p>

<p>collegeboard.com is your friend. Look for the contact us section. and may I ask what question you are reporting? Might be a good idea first to say it here.</p>

<p>I’m not sure if its a good thing to argue about but I wanted to try. </p>

<p>The International math section had a question about how many two digit numbers exist where the tenth digit is an odd number and digits is an even number. I put the answer as 20, excluding numbers like 10, 30, 50, 70, 90 because I thought that 0 is technically not even, because it’s a value that does not exist. </p>

<p>Will this be a good argument? Please give me your honest evaluation. It was a very easy question… maybe I overthough it about the concept of 0 cuz some teachers say 0 is neither even or odd.</p>

<p>The answer turned out to be 25, where you had to include the 5 numbers I listed above.</p>

<p>0 counts as even, sorry.</p>

<p>0 is even, Official SAT book also says so</p>

<p>Zero is even. I think what you are thinking of is that zero is neither positive or negative. But even then that’s only for zero itself, not numbers that end in zero.</p>

<p>yep, zero is definitely even. Sorry about that, but I guess we saved you a bit of a hassle, which would have turned out to be disappointing ultimately anyway!</p>

<p>Misunderstandings regarding the number “0” are common. “0” is an integer. “0” is a multiple of “2”, and hence it is an even number. To argue with the College Board regarding a fundamental mathematical concept is pointless.</p>

<p>See: [Parity</a> of zero - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parity_of_zero]Parity”>Parity of zero - Wikipedia)</p>

<p>alright guys. Thanks!!</p>

<p>On a moderate scale, what can i expect for -3 math?</p>