<p>I actually think that the pool of possible sections and several different test varieties based on that pool of, say, 20 sections is more likely than just 2 entirely different tests. Because I don't think anybody yet has said their test had NOTHING in common with another person.</p>
<p>^The kid who sat next to me didn't have any of the same questions as me, besides the essay of course.</p>
<p>Yeah I had 2 back to back writing tests too.</p>
<p>The first writing was experimental, the second one counted for everyone, no matter which test you had. The first one had the revision paragraph talking about s.b.woo</p>
<p>i think the poems and translation into modern day language is not a experiment. I had the two writing section and i still got the translation one/.</p>
<p>madamebovary, I've been asking everybody this, but do you know which writing was experimental?</p>
<p>snappleyum, why did you get extended time? is it by mental disease or defect? no, im being serious here. one of my good friends has a form of autistic disease and wants to take the SAT. Brilliant mathematician, kid's a calculator and encyclopedia packaged in WASP wrapping.</p>
<p>FOR THE PEOPLE WITH THE FOLLOWING AND ONLY "ONE" WRITING SECTION:</p>
<p>*Asian sightings, bioluminescence, poetry and translation, and dude who only lieks specialized knowledge
*one math section with root(2)-1 as the answer for 5 circles in a square and a math section with 4 integer values as the answer to a given function which you want to produce a nonnegative number</p>
<p>What was your improving paragraph on for the writing section? This will clear up for many people which writing section was the experimental for people who had to do two in a row.</p>