<p>I know I saw a really good SAT writing packet a couple days ago on here. I meant to bookmark it, since I was at my beach house and couldn't print it there, and I just forgot. It is DRIVING ME CRAZY now that I'm home that I can't find that thread again. I searched the forums with all the keywords I could think of, went through my history and everything...ugh! Anybody have the link/know where I could find it?</p>
<p>I don’t remember the link, but I downloaded the file. I uploaded it for you and anyone else that wants it</p>
<p>[Free</a> File Hosting Made Simple - MediaFire](<a href=“My Files”>My Files)</p>
<p>Thanks! 10char</p>
<p>Thank you so much! (: I really appreciate it!</p>
<p>Haha I’ve been on CC before searching all over the place for old posts that I read. I imagine you’re quite relieved!</p>
<p>my school offers method test prep for free :)</p>
<p>hey i found a math packet put together by method prep at college view. here’s the link if anyone wants it: <a href=“Best Colleges - Rankings, Statistics & Data - CollegeStats.org”>Best Colleges - Rankings, Statistics & Data - CollegeStats.org;
<p>^I started reading that until it said that you can find remainders by hand (no calc)…</p>
<p>It’s not a BAD review, but it doesn’t give the best strategies IMO</p>
<p>Well here’s a question that trips a lot of people up</p>
<p>What is the remainder when 22 is divided by 4? A lot of people jump to reduce the fraction to 11/2 yielding 5 with a remainder of 1, but the actual remainder is 2.</p>
<p>^… how can you get that wrong. 4x5= 20. 22-20= 2. Takes all of 2 seconds.</p>
<p>It’s not difficult material, but many students see a reduce-able fraction and immediately start canceling 2’s or whatever.</p>