<p>wow people remember the test in such great detail. all i remember were the passages and the math problems with pictures or diagrams.</p>
<p>do u remember the other choices for that question foolonthehill?</p>
<p>One must have first made an attempt to have failed, etc</p>
<p>what answer did u put for that question?</p>
<p>anyone else get "nevertheless" for the improving paragrah? Everyone else is stuck between "in other words" and "however" Thinking about it now, I think the answer is "in other words" because the next sentence was basically a restatement of the previous. IT was like "In other words, except in ..., scientists can still...."</p>
<p>that was a tricky one</p>
<p>i said nevertheless</p>
<p>yah....that was tricky, i remembered i first put in other words but then forgot what i finally put down...
it might be in the experimental section though</p>
<p>That question was "in other words."</p>
<p>I'm almost positive. People I know and I all said that because the second sentence just reiterated the principle in the first.</p>
<p>I don't remember that one - must've been experimental.</p>
<p>No. It was not experimental, because I had only one writing section.</p>
<p>Maybe you had the other "version" of the test.</p>
<p>I took the test that had two long MC writing sections back-to-back. One must have been experimental. 'Monkeys and pokerchips' and 'Forest fires help some plants grow'.</p>
<p>Monkeys was experimental for you CRBomber, since I had a CR experimental and my long writing was about the relationship between forest fires and some plants' reproduction.</p>
<p>I had bioluminescence and research of chimpanzees (2 passages), Asian citings and celery girl, Sherlock Holmes (the ignorant detective), Translation of poetry, and one with Venice in it.</p>
<p>Was the Venice one experimental then?</p>
<p>Yeah Venice was probably experimental.</p>
<p>Everybody with that version of the test had bioluminescence, asian/detective guy, and translation passage sections. I had those three but not Venice, so that was probably experimental.</p>
<p>Was the CR one w/ Dilatory as the answer for a setence completion the experimental one?</p>
<p>Do you guys remember the one thats "sometimes quite moving" on writing? i put E but it seems wordy to me. also the rickshaws one in writing. </p>
<p>also, if you get 2 wrong, its 2.5 points off, so does CB round up or down?</p>
<p>Asked my english teachers and looked it up online the quite moving one according to my sources is grammatically correct- the rickshaw one I'm pretty sure is E. (Although some claim that it should be by instead of from in the sentence)</p>
<p>the math was extremely hard, the first math section i got was the hard one with the grid in/ the chair one.</p>
<p>on the math</p>
<p>i omitted 6 and maybe got around 4 wrong,</p>
<p>wat kind of score would that be?</p>
<p>600s?</p>
<p>interesting</p>
<p>Brown - I put E for the rickshaw one too... I was debating for a while whether it could be "by" or "at" or something instead of "from."<br>
I really hated that one.</p>
<p>Hey guys,
I've scanned through this tremendously long thread quickly and found that everything on this last test was hard(?)</p>
<p>Anyway, I've already registered for the May 6 SAT Reasoning, and I have a few questions that need to be urgently answered:</p>
<p>1) What should I do in this last month before the may SAT to make the most comprehensive preparation? (by the way, I've already been studying for this since feb)</p>
<p>2) My critical reading sections are always low (650ish). So how can I SIGNIFICANTLY improve my performance on the CR sections in this last month? Any strategies? Useful techniques?</p>
<p>3) How can you study for the writing m/cs?</p>
<p>Thanks alot for your time and consideration.</p>