***January 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>yeah, that one was 8 years</p>

<p>Yes, I did alorsalors. It may have been on my experimental math section and that would mean that it doesn’t matter what you answered for it. Can you remember any of the other questions from that section?</p>

<p>Anyways, If she was 45 and had worked 9 years the answer would be that she needs to work 8 more years. Add 9 to 45 and you get 54. 70 - 54 is 16. If she works every year for the next 8 years of her life she would be able to retire.</p>

<p>Thanks! @Icmcb1
@alorsalors Yeah… I can’t recall what the exact answer was though… I remember seeing it on the google doc </p>

<p>Nevermind, 8 it was.</p>

<p>@lcmb1 thanks so much and I’m not sure which other questions were in that section but i recall having a graph about roller coasters or something and four questions to go with it… did you have that in a section and do you know if that was experimental?</p>

<p>@lcmb1 also do you know if the retiring question was in the same section as the roller coaster graph one?</p>

<p>@alorsalors The roller coaster graph was experimental; I didn’t have that in any of my math sections</p>

<p>@mizejonathan17 thanks! did you have the question about the 45 year old woman who worked 9 years and how many years till she retires question though?</p>

<p>Does anyone else recall a question 20 on math involving f(c) and f(x)? It definitely wasn’t the 1920 one. </p>

<p>@alorsalors
I do not recall having the question with the roller coaster graph. The question about the retirement age and the question about the roller coaster graph were likely not in the same section. Do either of you two remember having a question which had ticket prices for children, adults, and students to some sort of event. It was something like $8.50 for children, $10 for students, and $15 for adults.</p>

<p>@lcmb1 no i don’t remember having that section</p>

<p>@alorsalors You’re very welcome. Yes, I had that question as well.</p>

<p>@iconicsoul
I may have had that. Do you have any more information on the question?</p>

<p>@alorsalors
Do you remember having a question about finding an angle measure on a 4 sided shape in a circle?</p>

<p>Somewhat off topic, but do you guys know if you can still get an 800 in writing with a 7 or 8 essay. I am very confident that I got a 80 multiple choice score, but my essay was somewhat lacking in length. Any thoughts?</p>

<p>@lcmcb1 I can’t remember clearly, but they gave you the function f(x) which had the variable c in it, then asked you to find f(c) for 10 or something like that. Do you think it was experimental? </p>

<p>@iconicsoul
I can’t say for sure if I had that. It sounds somewhat familiar but I’m not positive. Do you remember any of the other questions from that section?</p>

<p>@mizejonathan17
Go to <a href=“SAT Score Calculator - The College Panda”>http://■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■.com/sat-score-calculator/&lt;/a&gt; to calculate your chances of getting a certain score based on the number of questions you missed / omitted and what you think you will get on your essay. The website uses curves from previous SATs to predict what you might get. Seems fairly accurate. It looks like you cannot get an 800 on the writing section with an 8 on the essay.</p>

<p>Edit: didn’t realize this site didn’t let me post direct links. Google “SAT score calculator” and you’ll find the website. Domain name is ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■.</p>

<p>Link isn’t working for me, but thanks for the input. That’s what I was thinking… It’s a shame. I guess I’ll settle for a 770 or 780.</p>

<p>@mizejonathan17
I edited the post and you can find it through Google if you search what I searched. It blocked what I wrote out as the domain name. Not sure why this is a rule on this site. </p>