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Extra resources for SAT
Sample text
Dress in layers. Bring a sweater in case the room is cold. Bring an accurate watch—not one that beeps—in case the room has no clock. You’ll want to use the same watch or small clock that you’ve been using during your practice sessions. Bring a small snack for quick energy. Don’t be late. Allow plenty of time for getting to the test site. You want to be in your seat, relaxed, before the test begins. DURING THE TEST First answer all the easy questions; then tackle the hard ones if you have time. Remember which sorts of questions you do well on.
Always read each grid-in question very carefully. Example 5 might have asked for the total cost of John’s lunch in cents. In that case, the correct answer would have been 604, which would be gridded in, without a decimal point, using only three of the four columns (see below). Note that the only symbols that appear in the grid are the digits from 0 to 9, a decimal point, and a fraction bar (/). The grid does not have a minus sign, so answers to grid-in problems can never be negative. In Introduction to the Math Sections, in Part Three, you will learn some important tactics for answering grid-in questions and will be able to practice filling in grids.
Make educated guesses, not random ones. As a rule, don’t fill in answers when you haven’t even looked at the questions. Watch out for eye-catchers, answer choices that are designed to tempt you into guessing wrong. Change answers only if you have a reason for doing so; don’t change them on a last-minute hunch or whim. Check your assumptions. Make sure you are answering the question asked and not the one you thought was going to be asked. Remember that you are allowed to write anything you want in your test booklet.