<p>for the people who got the historian, psychics, and aunt test for the SAT which one was the Experimental? My test started with the MATH section, and I was so happy with that! Well, that is until that dumb 2nd to last question came up --> x+y=xy something like that. ARGHHHHHH. I just put down some random answer cause I narrowed it down to 3answer choices, and they said that if you can narrow it down then answer the damn question, so I DID. But i probably got it wrong.</p>
<p>I GUESSED THAT RIGHT! haha im so happy. it was 1<x<2</p>
<p>aw ****. do you remember the answer choice letters? was that C or D?</p>
<p>no clue lol</p>
<p>well.. i put D. some random guess. OMGAWD. i hope that was it.</p>
<p>opqpop there can only be 1 circle with a given center point and given
radius in a plane ...... :D</p>
<p>lol, yeah that threw me off. I stared at the paper for a few seconds before getting it (without having tried to work it out thankfully).</p>
<p>If I had four writing sections (including the essay), three math, and three reading, does that mean the writing was definately experimental?</p>
<p>Hey Y'all!</p>
<p>I am an SAT teacher and I took the test this weekend. I had a reading experimental section for Section 3, but for the life of me, I cannot remember the topic. It was really difficult! It was not the Estellas section, although that was ALSO experimental because I did not have that section (but one of my students did). The historian passage was the only paired set of long passages, so it was not experimental. And the set with the African American family photos was not experimental, because it was the only section with two semi-long passages.</p>
<p>I do not remember an RST math question. I think the last questions of each of the three real Math sections were as follows:
1. Parabola with the area of the rectangle (13.5)
2. The 45 degree triangle with a long rectangle protruding from it (3y + 1/2(x-3)^2)
3. z = three equations (2).</p>
<p>If you had two writing sections with 35 questions each, one of those was experimental. The one with had ran/had run (Jack running from the bus) was NOT experimental.</p>
<p>Spartyon, if you are an SAT teacher, can you answer two questions for me?</p>
<p>1) The question about antibacterial soaps killing off innocuous bacteria and making the harmful ones even more resistant -- was there an error in "even more resistant" or should we have chosen E?
2) There was a grammar question about a poet being a "contributor towards modern literature" or something to that effect. Is "contributor towards" idiomatically correct or should we have chosen E? (This may have been an experimental writing for me, can you confirm?)</p>
<p>Spartyon, do you remember a math question with a pie chart of a class of art students?</p>
<p>Amb3r, I put "No Error" for the bacteria one. I thought "even more" was fine because it's clarifying what happens when the bacteria are already resistant. I do not remember your other question, OR it was experimental. But I would think its "contributor to." Overall, I thought there were a lot fewer "No Error" answers than on the tests I have taken in the past.</p>
<p>rchockey94, I do remember the pie chart. However, it was considered an easy or easy-medium question so I went through it quickly--there were no tricks. The right answer was one of the last two, but I cannot remember which one.</p>
<ol>
<li>The 45 degree triangle with a long rectangle protruding from it (3y + 1/2(x-3)^2)</li>
</ol>
<p>sparty on waht letter was that...PLEASE...this cud make or break my 800</p>
<p>I think one of my Critical Reading sections consisted of 25 questions instead of the usual 24.</p>
<p>Does this make it an experimental section?</p>
<p>i only had 9 sections.</p>
<p>^The essay counts too.</p>
<p>turks, that answer was choice E</p>
<p>uh what is this 45 degree triangle with a rectangle protruding from it question we are talking about</p>
<p>damn CB didnt put which one was experimental yet
is it because today is columbus day or something?</p>
<p>@kevinscool:</p>
<p>The triangle has 2-45 degree angles.
</a></p>