<p>As I’ve been doing practice for the World History SAT II, I have come across many “random” questions that I had never seen before or even heard of such as the economic system of the Minioans, why Charles de Gaulle came back as leader of France in 1958, and random documents, quotes, or pictures.</p>
<p>Is there any way to minimize the damage done by these “random” questions or to solve them. Do you really have to study EVERY single little bit of info to eliminate these questions? Is it because of these questions why the subject tests have curves?</p>
<p>haha yeah, I know what you mean. I think they’re one reason why the tests are hard, and why they have curves. My suggestion is to eliminate wrong answers and try to reason it out, if possible</p>
<p>Umm I kind of got 1/1 right that way, its kind of hard to explain but, the Mazzini, cavour, garibaldi, I got rid of ethiopia since it was wrong, the answers seemed to center around italy, not its city rome, so there goes c, the paliamentary democracy was voted into, has nothing to do with these people, and i guessed that these names would be bigger in italian unification, so I guessed b and was right :P</p>
<p>Oh that wasn’t that bad I knew it was italian unification right away</p>
<p>I liked the histography question, I didn’t know what it meant, but due to language arts, I could easily guess the answer, and I knew it was right 100%</p>