<p>these tests have very similar prohibitions against discussing, so why are we less strict with releasing SAT questions on public forums?</p>
<p>who said that we are less strict???</p>
<p>there was an announcement here before APs telling us not to discuss questions, yet the moderator "approved" the SAT discussion in the other thread.</p>
<p>Does this board even have mods? I've only been around for a few months but have never seen a mod.</p>
<p>trinity is a mod.</p>
<p>AP test questions (exact ones) are reused, SAT's aren't</p>
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Does this board even have mods? I've only been around for a few months but have never seen a mod.
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</p>
<p>Isn't it truly wonderful that this forum appears to be free of moderation? We'd like to believe that it is because our members are so disciplined. Or is it because our behind-the-scenes work is so subtle? :)</p>
<p>Regarding the AP, the position of College Confidential has been stated previously. Please check our warning. We simply ask our members to acknowledge that the AP program has more stringent rules, and that they actively pursue offenders. The College Board routinely reads this site, and does not hesitate to alert us when posts or threads are going too far. We believe that our policy of asking our members to wait until a reasonable time has elapsed has become tolerated by TCB.</p>
<p>The problem with collegeconfidential is that sometimes my posts just disappear and then reappear at a later date, and also that sometimes the order of posts gets confused. Also the way it doesn't let you post until 60 seconds later is a tad annoying; otherwise, rather good.</p>
<p>you can't discuss the sat essay until you recieve your score, that's what i heard</p>
<p>you can start discussing as soon as the College Board releases the question which is about 1 week, it's on the site with an analysis on what was the "experimental section"</p>
<p>earth-dragon, we can find out what our experimental section was in 1 week? how/where?</p>