May 2010 S.A.T.

<p>I just got the Q.A.S. for the last May S.A.T., and I’m quite mystified by what it reveals. For some reason it indicates that I omitted all the grid-in math questions, although I’m completely sure that I answered every one of them. It also says that one point off on the multiple choice and an essay score of eleven should equate to a 790 on the writing section, but I only got a 780 with those numbers. What could have gone wrong? Is it possible that the College Board made an error? Should I contact it?</p>

<p>Although we have recognized College Board as an absolute nonprofit organization with unerring products and ideal tests, it is entirely feasible for this supreme testation league to err in particular divisions which are deemed unerring. To err is to err, and to unerr is to unerr; such is the chief dogma of all standarized testing companies. In your case, it would be indubitably doubleplusungood for College Board itself, for it warrants subjectation to immediate suing, or in your case in particular, the demand for immediate repudiation and reassessment of the SAT I Reasoning score.</p>

<p>^How long does it take you to make a post?</p>

<p>It does not take us long to bring contemplated posts for public ostentation. We merely expose the subject to decent thoughts and immediately initiate its creation. Through precise estimintation, we claim the posting interims to be approximately 125 seconds.</p>

<p>^ Jeez… what a poser.

I think you mean estimation?</p>

<p>For the math, the grid in comes out as omit if you get it wrong. If you’re sure you’ve answered them correctly, however, then there could have been an error.</p>