|
|
|
SAT is a three-hour paper based test. It is note worthy that only two hours and thirty minutes of the test matters your score-- the experimental section is not scored. There are seven sections in the test. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Please note that the order of the different sections may not remain as mentioned above and it is anybody’s guess as to where the experimental section would lie.
The verbal section tests your critical reading skills and your vocabulary. One goal of the exam is to determine whether when you read the passage you understand what the author is saying and can make valid conclusions based on the text. Another goal is to determine if the level of your vocabulary is sufficiently high for you to be able to read college level text. Wisdom Mart faculty will teach you the strategies that will enable you to attack each question intelligently and will help you to develop the high-level vocabulary you need to score well on the verbal sections of the SAT.
The quantitative section of the SAT test measures your basic mathematical skills and understanding of elementary concepts, and the ability to reason quantitatively, solve quantitative problems, and interpret graphic data. In fact, the quantitative section of the SAT is less a test of your knowledge of arithmetic, geometry, and algebra than then they are of your ability to reason logically. What you may find difficult about these questions is not the level of mathematics, but the complicated application of all the mathematical theories you already know.
Scoring
SAT results in two scores: a verbal score and a math score, each of which lies between 200 and 800.
|