iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Education
 

The Top 5 SAT Land-mines

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Bruce L Smith

Let’s face it: the SAT test is littered with landmines seeking to lure the unwary student into careless or panic-induced mistakes. This underscores the fact that one of the best SAT preparation strategies involves learning how to keep the test from beating you. Being able to avoid the landmines separates the casual from the serious SAT test-taker.

1. THE DECOY

Profile: Whenever a simple calculation error or misinterpreted term might easily lead you astray on the SAT test, you can bank on the College Board’s providing the appropriately enticing wrong answer.
Warning signs: sudden euphoria at finding an easy question; also, wandering concentration or lack of focus.

How to avoid: maintain a steady pace; watch out for the units asked for in math questions; check your work as you go and your answers as time permits.

2. RIGHT AS WRONG

Profile: Just because an answer choice may be true does not mean it is also the answer to a given SAT test question.

Warning signs: “please select the best response”; other aliases include the words “most” and “least”.

How to avoid: always remember that the definition of “best” is not “that which can be proven true,” but rather “what the question is seeking,” and often, “what is least arguable based on the information provided.”

3. THE LONG WAY & THE SHORTCUT

Profile: This perpetrator is characterized by an apparently difficult question containing an easy shortcut. Even when/if an SAT test-taker gets the right answer, he/she might have wasted a lot of time on these deceptively simple questions.

Warning signs: questions which appear to be time-consuming; depending on whether or not you understand the material, this may induce false confidence or panic.

How to avoid: consider whether the question truly requires much of your time (e.g., is it near the end of an SAT test section, where you’d expect harder questions?).

4. ROMAN NUMERAL QUESTIONS

Profile: As if one layer of answer choices weren’t enough, this type of SAT test question throws two at you. First there’s a series of statements labeled with Roman numerals; below them the standard four or five answer choices ask you to identify which combination of statements is true based on the limited information given.

Warning signs: the Roman numerals, obviously; also, answer choices such as “I and II only” or “II, III, and IV”.

How to avoid: consider each Roman numeral separately, label it True or False as appropriate, then use your markings to evaluate the lettered answer choices; beware of choices that are only sometimes or in some cases true.

5. “FIGURE NOT DRAWN TO SCALE”

Profile: This landmine is a variation on the decoy—the SAT test-makers give you a figure designed to trick your eyes into seeing the shape that leads to a particular wrong answer. As if to taunt you, it even proclaims that the “figure is not drawn to scale.”

Warning signs: a geometric form in which the correct answer seems all too apparent.

How to avoid: circle the phrase “not drawn to scale” whenever you find it, and draw a version of the figure that doesn’t resemble the shape provided, but uses the information in the question to better represent the situation.

Take the time to watch for landmines and the extreme confidence or panic that often accompanies them. “Know your enemy” is a sound overall approach to SAT preparation, and that includes knowing when the enemy has set a trap. With every landmine you avoid, your true confidence will soar, and so will your scores.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Bruce L. Smith is an experienced SAT content creator for http://www.satprepplan.com. For more information on how you can outsmart the SAT test, refer to our website at http://www.satprepplan.com.
Article Tags: answer [See Dictionary], avoid [See Dictionary], sat [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on September 11, 2006 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

Gemstone Globes - Beauty And Education In One
Submitted by: Jesse Akre

It is unfortunate that today's youth has lost a grasp on the world and the countries involved Many schools today just teach to standardized tests and learning about other lands and cultures seems to have been left out of the mix...

Become a Polyglot: It’s Easier Than You Think
Submitted by: Jacob Coroner

When you hear the adjective ‘polyglot’ describing someone, it is most likely for you to think that the person is a sheer genius, since he may have the ability to speak in 6-7 languages or more...

How to Become Fluent in a Foreign Language
Submitted by: Jacob Coroner

Almost all of us have learnt French, Spanish or any other foreign language in our primary or secondary education...

How to Learn a Language: The Most Effective Approach
Submitted by: Jacob Coroner

In order to enhance your memory skills, learning a foreign language is an ideal subject Learning the vocabulary of a foreign language often requires associating sets of meaningless syllables of that language with words already existing in your native language...

Language Learning Approaches: Better Approaches For Faster Learning
Submitted by: Jacob Coroner

The language learning approach refers to the approaches that need to be applied to view the nature of the language, its beliefs and the ideas about how these can be applied practically so as to ease the language learning and teaching process...

Language Learning Strategies: Better Strategies For More Effective Learning
Submitted by: Jacob Coroner

Language learning strategies do not imply overall plans, but rather methods using which you can comprehend and remember the language while you are learning it...

Language Learning Techniques: Better Techniques For More Effective Learning
Submitted by: Johnathan Cunnings

Language learning or language acquisition is the process by which humans learn or acquire a language and this is the leading aspect that distinguishes humans from other species...

Learning Tips For Effortless Language Learning
Submitted by: Johnathan Cunnings

Any person, who is learning a new language for the first time, may initially face some emotional trauma related to the territory...

Second Language Acquisition Strategies
Submitted by: Johnathan Cunnings

Second language learning or second language acquisition refers to the process of learning a second language besides the native language...

Second Language Learning Theories, Myths and Facts
Submitted by: Johnathan Cunnings

Second language learning refers to the learning of a new language besides the native language There are many second language learning theories that aim to explain the way second language is learnt and which approach is the best...

Second Language Learning: How to do it Right
Submitted by: Johnathan Cunnings

Second language learning is defined as the process of learning an additional language besides the native language...

How Much Money Can I Make Teaching English?
Submitted by: Honor Baldry

How Can You Answer That How much money you can make is, of course, a very difficult question and the answer is somewhere between nothing and a moderate amount of money...

I Don't Like Kids, Can I Still Find Teaching Work?
Submitted by: Honor Baldry

Some people just don't get along with children – it's a fact And if you're one of them, the idea of teaching abroad might not be so tempting...

Teach English in Algeria
Submitted by: Honor Baldry

Halfway between Tunisia and Morocco and home to the legendary expanse of the Sahara desert, Algeria is full of challenging adventure opportunities and cultural diversity...

Teach English In Australia
Submitted by: Honor Baldry

So massive that it’s both a continent and a country, Australia is the size of the USA but with a rather smaller scale population...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy