<p>My guess is 3-5 from what I've seen. What do you all think?</p>
<p>2-4 I think</p>
<p>about 10-15% of the section. using this knowledge as an advantage was one of the strategies mentioned in “Barron’s SAT 2400” (i glanced at it in Barnes & Noble). i did not buy it though</p>
<p>Usually 3-6 more or less</p>
<p>I think I got about 5 in all of the writing sections combined but I certainly could have screwed up one or more of them.</p>
<p>on average it is one out of every six answers.</p>
<p>2-5 or about 10-20% are No Errors on the writing.</p>
<p>From my analysis of many, many tests, it’s 2 to 3 in both sections of Improving Sentences and 2 to 4 in the Identifying Sentence Errors section.</p>
<p>who cares? honestly, if you think 6 sentences have no error and you remember that it’s only 2-4, will you go back and change your answers for the sake of a statistic? no…</p>
<p>^I wouldn’t change them immediately, but I would definitely recheck the no errors. It’s unlikely that there would be 6 and I would go with the odds that I probably ignored an error somewhere.</p>
<p>i would say 2-4 for the majority of the tests. Remember though, there are exceptions.</p>
<p>Agreed, yettiddqq8. Many people finish the writing section with extra time, and those who have too many “no errors” could begin their review with those questions.</p>
<p>i disagree, but that’s just me.</p>
<p>On average 1/6 of the questions. So you could expect about 4 no errors in the improving sentences and 3 in the identifying sentence errors. You’d have about 1 ‘(as it is now)’ choice in the paragraph improvement.</p>
<p>about 8 overall though it varies</p>