{"id":6283,"date":"2016-03-31t16:59:08","date_gmt":"2016-03-31t23:59:08","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/?p=6283"},"modified":"2016-03-31t16:59:08","modified_gmt":"2016-03-31t23:59:08","slug":"the-a-in-sat-stands-for-american","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/sat\/the-a-in-sat-stands-for-american\/","title":{"rendered":"the “a” in sat stands for american"},"content":{"rendered":"
actually, it doesn’t stand for anything<\/a>, but it might as well, given how much us literature and history is going to be incorporated into the new exam. while the old sat was famous for using passages that would put dictionary-writers to sleep, the new one is using major documents from us history. let\u2019s see if we can use this information to improve our scores and better prepare for the test. this is a noteworthy shift from the old sat, and from the current act. the former did not have this element of predictability, and the later still doesn\u2019t. now, standardized tests are inherently predictable in their question structure and subject matter, but anything we can do to have precognition of the specific passages and focuses will make the test more familiar and friendly to us. the sat drew passages “from college-level reading sources and [were] adapted to make them fit easily into the 700 words or so” as lucas fink says in another magoosh post<\/a>. \u00a0but as most high-school students are not huge consumers of \u00a0“college-level reading,” there’s a low likelihood that test-takers would have seen the material previously.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n among the myriad discussions of the impact of \u201conly four answer choices\u201d and praise for the elimination of the \u201cguessing penalty\u201d* there is no mention of the starkest change: the college board has given explicit indication that it will draw new passages from us-centric documents.<\/p>\n the new sat is saying \u201cno\u201d to passages about the history of dewey decimal system\u00a0and \u201cyes\u201d to founding documents: materials produced by or about founding fathers and civil rights leaders. the college board says,<\/p>\n on each assessment, one passage will be drawn from a u.s. founding document (a text such as the declaration of independence, the constitution, or the bill of rights) or a text that is part of the great global conversation (a text such as one by lincoln or king, or by an author from outside the united states writing on a topic such as freedom, justice, or liberty).<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n while the great global conversation sounds like a mildly interesting youtube live-stream event, i fear the truth is more along the lines of, \u201chow do we be the change we want to see in the world?\u201d or some other quote you\u2019d expect to see on your high school counselor\u2019s cat poster. the more predictable the sat is, the easier it becomes. and now, the college board has told us exactly what to expect on the reading section. take ap us history instead of ap european or ap world history. for the first time, a high school class besides math will have a direct applicability on the sat. students who spend a year studying us history will have a very high likelihood of encountering a passage that will appear on the sat. if you haven\u2019t seen the specific passage, then chances are you at least know the context of it. imagine studying us history and then seeing a letter written by martin luther king, jr. even if you haven\u2019t seen the letter before, you know so much about the context of the life and times,\u00a0that you will have a clear advantage over students who do not have that same body of knowledge.<\/p>\n need a quick refresher on your us history? start here<\/a>, and then skim this list of documents<\/a> which i predict the new sat will draw from for its reading passages.<\/p>\n by making sure your curriculum is rich in material that is likely to be on the sat you improve your likelihood of success in both the ap us history test and the sat, as the overlap will make you stronger in both.<\/p>\n *the elimination of a “guessing penalty” is of no benefit to test-takers, as the test is scaled, and this change effects all test-takers equally. for example, if an accuracy level of 75% used to scale to the 95th percentile, now an accuracy level of 80% will scale to the 95th percentile. the 5% gap in accuracy will be the 5% gained by guessing. the new sat’s focus on us history and us literature provides an opportunity for sat point gains.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":156,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[91],"tags":[],"ppma_author":[24917],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
\n <\/p>\nhow is this different?<\/h2>\n
\n <\/p>\nin the old days\u2026<\/h2>\n
enter the new sat.<\/h2>\n
\n <\/p>\nwhy does this matter?<\/h2>\n
\n <\/p>\nhow can i maximize points, using this?<\/h2>\n
\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"