Official thread october sat 2013 test

<p>Definitely a “mundane” test if you know what I mean. :)</p>

<p>@theabnormalkid are you trolling? seriously? do not cancel your score.</p>

<p>yo vanilla thunder 25/9 is wrong, and 64/9 is too. nobody has the courage to explain how they got the answer, which was 4</p>

<p>Mundane seemed like a better word because she was used to reading so much but never hearing the words spoken, that the book was “mundane”. When she heard the words spoken by Ms Flowers it was suddenly “extraordinary”.</p>

<p>Awwww…
well I tried
Seems like the concensus is on: mundane and extraordinary</p>

<p>The experimental math (20 questions) was pretty difficult in my opinion</p>

<p>@ArmedbyKnowledge that’s what I’ve been saying but nothing would really enable us to have inferred the girl’s sarcastic use of “romantic” since she had never made a sarcastic comment until (arguably) then. Do questions ever get thrown out because of ambiguity? How often?</p>

<p><a href=“What the New SAT and Digital ACT Might Look Like - The New York Times”>What the New SAT and Digital ACT Might Look Like - The New York Times;

<p>^that’s a joke</p>

<p>What was the other option for that question?</p>

<p>Satisfactory…?</p>

<p>On #14, section 10 i put “to inference” Because the rest of them were all “inference…” And I thought everything after inference was unnecessary. Any thoughts?!</p>

<p>I’m not trolling. It’s just that I don’t know if I will be judged differently than if I had taken only one test.</p>

<p>What were some questions in the experimental math?</p>

<p>How the hell could it be 4? You divide by 9pi because the radius is 3. It’s either 25/9 or 64/9 depending on how that picture was drawn</p>

<p>I had a really odd circle question where it was the radius of the small circle was 6 and the radius of the larger circle was another 5 over it. And it asked for the ratio of areas. It was a grid in. I wrote 3.36. But I haven’t seen it discussed anywhere, so I dunno. Might’ve been experimental though.</p>

<p>its 64/9. the question specifies that there are TWO circles, each with center O</p>

<p>@theabnormalkid Just making sure :slight_smile: But honestly you should be fine. They don’t care if you take it more than once (just as long as you don’t take it more than 3 times).</p>

<p>Harro that’s what everyone is arguing about… And the 6 in the problem they gave you was the diameter</p>

<p>Harrovian: I think I had that… the radius of the big circle was 8 (5+3)</p>

<p>What did number 14 say again? Was it about the lodge?</p>

<p>You can take SAT more than 3 times. That’s why Score Choice is available. When you send SAT scores, collegeboard will automatically scorechoice your SAT scores for schools that only want the highest scores</p>

<p>Obviously there is two circles, but I seem to remember the 5 given in the problem was the entire radius of the Circe, I’m pretty sure the point went to the center</p>