<p>I need to raise my CR and Math scores for the coming October SAT.
Now I’ve been practicing a lot of CR and I’ve been getting in a range of 4-6 questions wrong and I’d like to reduce that to something around 1-3.</p>
<p>However when checking the correct answer choices in the Blue Book and checking the answer explanation online, I do not find the answer explanation to be sufficient.</p>
<p>I often find that I “disagree” with what the College Board considers the correct answer. Now I know that the passage must “support it” with actual text, but sometimes even the college board “correct answer” is kind of vague and isn’t directly supported.</p>
<p>Can someone tell me what kind of mentality I need to develop and/or point me towards some tips/help?</p>
<p>We find your intransigence toward College Board’s “absolute” solutions callow and facetious. Even so, we can comprehend your excrebility that which is directed at College Board: College Board’s solutions does not entail unreasonability; College Board is the embodiment of unreasonability. However, one must realize that he or she does not formate the rules to the SAT I Reasoning Test, College Board does. To do well on the SAT I Reasoning Test, one must have a mindset similar to the masterminds of these standarized test creators. One must rule out individual thought and opinion, and bow down to College Board. “College Board is supreme. To defy its laws and to think what is not to be thought will indubitably result in low SAT scores”. These words, spoken by the famous Dr. Silverturtle himself, demonstrate simply how the capacity of individual thought on the exam can confer low testation. To put it simply: one must surrender his or her individualism to College Board in order for high SAT I reasoning scores to occur. Heil College Board.</p>
<p>^Luciferlied Where can one find this kind of mindset?</p>
<p>^^ Your advice definitely helped a lot Lucy</p>
<p>Comrade PencilxBoxes, we are currently in the process of formulating The Theory and Reason of a CoBo Inferiority Complex. This informative novel will illustrate our insight on the belief that surrendering one’s individualism to College Board (recently, we have coined the term “CoBo” to refer to this treasonous organization). Its publication will be in the near or very distant future.</p>
<p>How near is the very distant future? months? years?</p>
<p>Luciferlied, are you saying that in order to do well on the CR section that one must approach it as an eight year old child with cognitive enhancements?</p>
<p>For example, if a Passage indicates that narrator head a gunshot in the next room followed by the sound of foot steps coming from the hallway. That the only conclusion one can make is that the narrator believes that he or she has heard a gunshot, and that he or she believes that there were the sounds of footsteps coming from the hall?</p>
<p>One cannot imply that these footsteps are from a person, and that this person could possible be a murderer?</p>
<p>Comrade Fuzzy, that is EXACTLY what we were attempting to imply. In the realm of CoBoism, one cannot go behind on the information that is given. In Passage Based Questions, the answer is ALWAYS in the passage. No inference is needed, simply stick to the information that is given.</p>