SAT question of the day

<p><a href=“http://apps.collegeboard.com/qotd/question.do[/url]”>http://apps.collegeboard.com/qotd/question.do&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Hey guys, I know most of you dismiss the question of the day as mostly “easy” or “mediums” but it turns out that every once in a while they include a question that stumps the majority of responders. Today’s question is one such. </p>

<p>I partly suspect that the college board uses these questions to screen for possible question types to use in later tests–in short, serving the same function as the segment on the real test that doesn’t count.</p>

<p>Anyway it may be a good idea to have a thread dedicated to the official SAT question of the day.</p>

<p>I thought it was extremely easy…but idk</p>

<p>that was tricky. the only reason i got it right was b/c i knew what veneer meant. ( i got lucky).</p>

<p>I noticed with the Question of the Days that there’s hardly ever a ‘hard’ CR or Writing question. However, there are frequent ‘hard’ math questions.</p>

<p>Honestly, i use to get a lot of the CR problems wrong, with the Words. But i started memorizing some words from Kaplan List, and im pretty good at them now. Hopefully that will pick me up points to make up for the stupid passages.</p>

<p>that wasn’t that hard…
“frill”, “veneer” helps
and the rest don’t make too much sense</p>

<p>lol yeah it was easy, nothing else really makes sense.</p>

<p>oh haha, ok nevermind… the person who posted, posted this yesterday… so the question would be different!
please disregard that.
:)</p>

<p>I find that the SAT Question of the Days are far easier than the Q’s on the actual test…</p>

<p>Yes - these questions are usually super easy.</p>

<p>They’re much easier than the real thing.</p>

<p>I’m wondering why they don’t allow us to edit our posts.</p>

<p>Anyway, what I meant with my initial post is that OCCASIONALLY they post a question that confounds the majority of the people who answer it.</p>

<p>Most of the time the questions are ridiculously easy with 80% people getting it right…occasionally there’s a situation though where only 40% get it right. Those aren’t necessarily easy.</p>