The
SAT
Reasoning Test, formerly called the Scholastic Aptitude Test, the
Scholastic Assessment Test,
and the SAT,
is a standardized test for college admissions in the United States. In the U.S.,
the SAT
is administered by the private Educational Testing Service (ETS) and is
developed, published, and scored by the College Board.
SAT IIt
is a three-hour, primarily multiple-choice
test that measures verbal and mathematical reasoning abilities. Verbal questions
test your ability to understand and analyze what you read, recognize
relationships between parts of a sentence, establish relationships between pairs
of words. Math questions test your ability to solve problems involving
arithmetic, algebra and geometry.
The SAT I is a
three-hour test made up of seven sections:
1 Verbal Sections
Question Type: Analogies (19
questions), Sentence completion (19 questions) , Critical reading (40 questions)
Analysis of Issue. Analysis of Argument-Total questions: 78,Duration : 1 hour 15
minutes
2 Math Sections
Question Type: Five-choice
multiple-choice (35 questions) , Four-choice quantitative, comparison (15
questions) , Student-produced response (10 question ) Total questions: 78
,Duration : 1 hour 15 minutes
3 Equation Section
Question Type:
Either verbal or math, Total
questions: 60,Duration : 30 minutes
These seven sections can
appear in many different orders in a test book. So your test book may have
sections in a different order than the test book of someone else who is taking
the test at the same time. The SAT I does not measure motivation, creativity, or
special talents. |