SAT World History-International-June 2013

<p>hm how about 9 omitted and pessimistically 15 wrong?</p>

<p>Not sure if this has been resolved, but the answer to the Congo one was definitely rubber. They exported ivory, but to a lesser degree.</p>

<p>And the one about colonization in Africa is not military dictatorship, because if you look at nations like Algeria, they got a democratically elected president (Ben Bella) after their struggle for independence. So the answer would be nations with a large non native population had the longest struggles.</p>

<p>740 or 750 using the 2 bb curves.</p>

<p>did any one figure out what the last three questions were?
I really don’t remember much about the test :o</p>

<p>What about the renaissance humanism question i put an art form</p>

<p>What about the bautaug? Conferences i had no idea so i skipped</p>

<p>The conference was for the the non-aligned movement. </p>

<p>And renaissance humanism was the study of classics. (I don’t think we have that on the list)</p>

<p>is the curve for this test going to 76, 77, or 78 for an 800?
considering that this was apparently a new test, I’m hoping it’s a 76, but 77 also seems likely. I surely hope it’s not a 78.</p>

<p>I think it’ll be 75. That was the 2002 curve. I personally think that this test was harder than 2002, but it’s the only comparable example I could find.</p>

<p>Gloogle, that is not the official collegeboard curve, it is just an approximation :D</p>

<p>I seriously don’t remember the questions about De Gaulle/EEC and a multi-ethnic state (Sudan or something?). Is it possible that there are different versions of the test?</p>

<p>Same, I don’t remember those questions at all.</p>

<p>HM I found this in my barron’s book, as well as my princeton review book.</p>

<p>"“Agriculture, or seed selection and sowing of plants, seems to have developed independently in many parts of the world.”</p>

<p>This includes herding.</p>

<p>It seems to me this explains the inconclusive question “Where did agriculture begin?”</p>

<p>Sorry if it has been posted already.</p>

<p>P.S. Some of these questions, I definitely do not remember seeing.</p>

<p>I don’t remember the EEC, Sudan, and Africa before 1000 CE question. I remember everything else. </p>

<p>And correct me if I’m wrong but I seem to remember a Warsaw pact question.</p>

<p>I agree, I don’t remember any question on DeGaulle</p>

<p>By the way, the list of questions that was last posted said that Homer’s map was accurate, but I’m not sure about that - I put that it constituted empirical evidence or something like that because concluding that Homer was accurate is a little extreme, isn’t it? (Sorry to bring this up again)</p>

<p>Yeah. I said it was empircally accurate. You couldn’t prove that the events were accurate, but you could prove that his geographical locations were.</p>

<p>Good haha I was worried about that one!
The list said that the pastoral nomads question hasn’t been resolved either. I put the option about trading with intermittent conflict because I’m pretty sure the nomads were helpful but there was fighting that went on between them and civilized societies… What do y’all think?</p>

<p>I put the nomads settled down as well but I think it is wrong, that is probably right, ex. nomads such as mongols continually raided villages for resources, but also kept trading relations with civilized societies</p>

<p>I put down raiding as well.</p>

<p>Hmmmmm i never had the eec question or athenian question for citizens.</p>

<p>I had an athenian question on the system itself and i said there were few elections. Did we get renaissance humanism.</p>