@Lesender10 100% positive it said integer. Sorry
@KillerKiwiJuice I’ve never heard of that
Alright thanks. I don’t know why you would cancel scores then, unless i’m missing something haha
Sorry but I’m pretty confused about why people would want to cancel their scores. Can’t they just choose which score they want to send to the colleges? Plus, don’t colleges only look at the best score?
I’m not trying to be disrespectful or anything, I’m just trying to understand
@Zaffre some college (I believe Stanford is one of them) require you to send every score you receive on every test. You are not allowed to choose. Canceling the score would make it as if you never took the test
Ohhh okay I see. Thanks!
someone please helppp! so in the RC about zen teachings, the author used a zen term to describe how you cannot reach enlightenment without suffering/hitting rock bottom. does anyone know/remeber the zen term for this? pls let me know
The f(x) - g(x) question, the last one of a section, I don’t understand how the answer could have been -4. There were two absolute value curves, one standard (f), and one reflected over the x-axis (g). The question (as I recall) then said f(6) = a, what is g(a). What “a” value would have gotten you a y-value of -4, given that these particular curves were rather standard. Did I miss any particular shifts or is this not what the question asked? Was the graph deceptively labeled in terms of intervals? If I’ve gotten this wrong my 800 is…no longer an 800 so if anyone could explain.
@sublimestate it’s dukkha
@satanxietea I chose perfect because I didn’t think the other made sense. However, I wasn’t completely sure on it.
Anyone else have any opinions? (on internet passage, how would the author of passage 1 view the opening paragraph of passage 2 - “perfect description of his experience”, “misrepresentation of drawbacks”, “understating effects”)
For the internet one, I said perfect description, but I thought that was slightly harder than others since it really rellied on spot-on inference imo.
My problem with perfect was that the author of the first described the depth of the struggle and the unease it brought him. Simply saying, “the internet changes the way you think”, doesn’t convey that struggle, and therefore it wouldn’t be the “perfect” description. I don’t see how anything could have been perfect which is why I strayed from that answer.
Does anyone have an idea of the math curve?
I hope it will be:
-1 780
-2 760
-3 740
-4 720
I’m guessing more like
-1 780
-2 760
-3 730
-4 690
@concreteolives You have to understand, when you say -3, you’re implying 3 multiple choice wrong, and that is really a 50/54, not a 51/54. This happened to me on a previous test. If you’re saying 3 multiple choice wrong, that would be a 720, not a 740. If you mean two multiple choice wrong and a skip, or two and a grid in, then that would get you the 740. But, I suspect you meant the former.
What about for CR?
The reading was not particularly difficult and the vocabulary certainly wasn’t in comparison to past tests I’ve sat through. There really, for the first time, was not a word I was unfamiliar with. I wouldn’t expect anything significant, most likely the standard CR curve which would be the most likely (by means of percentage) score on the “college-panda” calculator.
Does anyone remember the answer choices for the internet “perfect” question? I think I chose one that said something like “Reflects the author’s loss of focus”
Please help!
How many can I miss at most to get 700 on math??
@christinekim93 My raw score was -5 both times I took the SAT math previously and I got 690 both times.