<p>you should still practice jumping</p>
<p>^^^</p>
<p>It'll prevent leg cramps during the SAT. </p>
<p>and get you girls.</p>
<p>Hm.</p>
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<p>Yes. I pwned the SAT mainly because I practiced with contest math, and reading which was over my level so I just had to struggle. It wasn't an overnight process, it took at least a summer.</p>
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<p>Ummmm.... no. You fail not because you pwned the SAT by studying "contest" math and reading, you simply fail because you replied with a "Yes" . Wanna know why? I think you're smart enough to figure it out. </p>
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<p>Those aren't "tricks" just for the SAT, they're "tricks" for studying in general. If you don't know the basics, you can't walk. And if you can't walk, you'll never run. And what's the point of a practice test without mistakes to understand?</p>
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<p>Way to contradict yourself. If you can't walk, you can't run-true. But studying hard is like running without learning how to walk. Get it? The point of practice tests are for practice- but how you go about practicing that material is an entirely different story. That's where studying hard vs studying smart comes in, and where your opinion of how one should go about using those tests fail.</p>
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<p>True, with the exception of math. And writing. </p>
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<p>Um... no. I'll let somebody else explain. </p>
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<p>It's a metaphor. Sheesh.</p>
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<p>No, it was not. It was an analogy- and as Shiomi keenly pointed out, a very bad one.</p>
<p>Well, I think you will stand out because most of the Asian applicants have nearly perfect SAT scores, so they will probably take a deeper read into you. But anyway, if your application is rounded, you always have a chance!</p>
<p>Do you just like telling people that they're wrong?</p>
<p>Maybe you should go get some jumping skills and pick up some ladies. Maybe it will relax you or something</p>
<p>jumping makes me happy :)</p>