June 2009 - Mathematics Level 2

<p>Yeah sorry just the Math one… And I need at least a 770. Wharton needs to see that because I won’t take Calc until this year…</p>

<p>that sounds familiar k200</p>

<p>^^^ Second that</p>

<p>I got answer B. for that one, w/e it was.
I think I put .9593.
All I did was put sin-1(.3) in my calc, and then take that answer and put in cos(ANS).
Is that was right way to do it?</p>

<p>So, I didn’t nearly finish this exam. I left 13 blank. and I’m expecting 4-5 wrong. what does that sound like for a score?</p>

<p>^^^^ No, sorry but thats the wrong way to do it, I believe. You got the answer for the wrong quadrant. I think…</p>

<p>ahhh, crap.
it was the last question I did, and I just went for the quickest way I could think of.</p>

<p>I omitted none, so how many do I need right(or wrong) to get a 700 at least?</p>

<p>Does anyone remember the angle measures of the second triangle of the similar triangle problem that involved law of sines?</p>

<p>Is the 800-10(44-R) formula from Barron’s accurate for predicting my score?</p>

<p>" got answer B. for that one, w/e it was.
I think I put .959"
i put -0.953</p>

<p>cos(pi - sin^-1(.3)) = -0.953</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>25 satisfies that too…</p>

<p>I omitted none, so how many do I need right(or wrong) to get a 700 at least?</p>

<p>wasnt the question n-2 and n+2 must be prime, while n wasnt?? answer should be 15 although i vaguely remember the question</p>

<p>This was an easy one but my brain wasn’t working early in the test. It said the distance from a point (x,y) to the origin was 3. What would the distance be from the origin to the point (2x, 2y). Was the answer 6?</p>

<p>

27/9=3</p>

<p>10char</p>

<p>@ d12345 i got 6 ^^</p>

<p>is it -0.953 for the sin(.3) q</p>

<p>cos(pi - sin^-1(.3)) = -0.953?</p>

<p>

If this is a typical 44 curve, you need 34 raw for a 700, meaning you can get 13 wrong.</p>

<p>for the counter example you only prove the conclusion wrong. for example “if i’m wrong, then i’ll apologize” if im right, then you cant possibly “counter” what ive said because it doesnt apply.</p>

<p>hey so if 4 omits (yeah, stupid i know, didn’t manage my time well enough) how many can i get wrong for a 750? how about a 700?</p>

<p>does any1 know what the curves were for the two sat2 math2 tests in the official college board math book?</p>