SAT II Math IC

<p>Ugh. I’m freaking. Info always helps me calm down. SO…for those of you generous enough to share, I have a few questions about the SAT II Math IC. </p>

<li><p>What concepts MUST you know to do well on the test?</p></li>
<li><p>What is the best way to prepare? </p></li>
<li><p>Does anyone know the curve? (I imagine it’s pretty hard, since more people take it.) </p></li>
</ol>

<p>Maybe I’ll come up with others later…Thanks for any help you can give to a desperate fellow-student! (Apparently I’m not above begging. ;-)</p>

<p>The curve is hard. Get one wrong and you get like a 780. You must know precalc, some trig, geometry, algebra. Best way to prepare, get a book like Barrons.</p>

<p>Hey-</p>

<p>I just took (and got my score) the IC test. I was planning on taking the 2C so I started doing practice tests a few days before. Lo-and-behold, I couldn't get above a 650! Around midnight Friday night, the night before the test, I deicded to switch to the IC test. I took half of one practice test and realized I knew most of the stuff, and then went right to bed. So basically, I did no review/studying.</p>

<p>Anyway I ended up getting a 770 and I'm not a math person, if you know what I mean. Point being- you will probably do fine! You need to know some geometry, trig, a lot of algebra and solving equations. It really is a basic test- the only bad part is the killer curve. As zantedeschia said, it's somewhere around 10 off for each wrong answer! But if you took the SAT I and did well on that math section I imagine you'll do fine on this. It's quite similar. Good luck!</p>

<p>If you've had Pre-calculus, DO NOT TAKE IT. Take Math IIC. I thought I had forgotten all my Pre-cal material, but I'm positive that I would have gotten over 700 had I taken the Math IIC instead of Math IC. (My score in the Real SAT IIs book has proven that to me.) I got 610 on Math IC.</p>

<p>Yes take the test in the real sat ii's book and see how you are on it; for instance, i took it and found out that i did worse on ic than iic, good than i found out beforehand</p>

<p>I disagree with grxkn
Theres no way to get taht much of a IC IIC diff if ur in precalc
im in precalc - i got like 740 on the IC practice, but 800 on the actual IIC</p>

<p>IIC is best if u r careless - if ur impeccable but not in high level math, tahts where iC comes in</p>

<p>i always suggest IIC - colleges look highly upon it compared to IC (OBVIOUSLY)</p>

<p>I'm confused as to about what you're disagreeing with me. :-/</p>

<p>Maybe s/he misread/mistyped, but yes i agree ic is not a good idea if you're prone to careless mistakes</p>

<p>SAT I math is thinking outside of the box and analytical. SAT 2 Math 2c is more having a good knowledge of different concepts and formulas and applying them. Its less logic, more knowledge. In most Math 2c questions, theres a long way to do each one using a long-winded process of plugging in numbers, and a short way using reasoning.</p>

<p>I can't speak for 1C because I've never taken it, but I know that careless-mistake people should go for the 2C. For 1C, you should probably know all the triangle rules, planar geometry rules, systems of equations, some alg 2. Perhaps even a little trig thrown in there.</p>

<p>Bleh, I've not taken pre-calc. I'd rather be strangled slowly. So yeah. </p>

<p>Ya'll are great to answer...but I was looking for more specific what do you need to know since I know the IC is for algebra through trig people. (Which I am.) I don't know...I'm good in math compared to the average student, but I just...suck at it compared to you smart "800 no problem no study no sweat" people.</p>

<p>my math ic just jumped 100pts - BUY KAPLAN! or study from "Sparknotes MATH IC" - you can even get the book free online on their website: <a href="http://testprep.sparknotes.com/books/sat2/math1c/%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://testprep.sparknotes.com/books/sat2/math1c/&lt;/a>
(though I still strongly recommend you study from Kaplan too). Barrons is generally amazing, but they suck for the Math IC - i wouldn't recommend it. </p>

<p>Math IC
you need to know:
30% algebra
20% plane geometry
6% solid geometry
12% coordinate geometry
8% trigonometry
12% functions
6% statistics and sets
and the rest of the questions are 6% miscellaneous.</p>

<p>if you're above average in math, but not into advanced math, then the IC is probably for you. Personally, i don't think the fuss about the curve should be that big a deal. if you cover the main topics i've mentioned above, and do a few practice tests bfore - you should be set.</p>