TRUE or FALSE: hard questions on the SAT are worth more points than easy questions.
Before I give you the answer, please be sure to understand that test questions on each SAT section are usually organized
from the easiest to the hardest. In other words, the first question
of a section should be easy while the last question should be hard. Not every section follows this formula exactly, but in general, most sections start easier and build towards harder questions.
Now, back to the TRUE/FALSE statement. The statement that "hard questions on the SAT are worth more points than easy questions" is entirely FALSE! Scoring on the SAT is not based on question
difficulty. You score the same amount of points on an easy question as you do on a hard question.
So strategically speaking, score points quickly and
accurately on the easy questions. As for the hard questions, you can choose to
skip them altogether or give yourself some extra time to solve
them.
Further, for easy questions in the beginning of a section, the answer should be very
obvious without any tricks or traps. However, on harder questions, the obvious
answers are usually tricks. So if you are at the end of a section and you are rushing to finish, the answer that looks quick and easy is probably a trap. Be wary because the further you go, the harder it becomes.
Learn more SAT Scores by reading 2400 SCORES: 24 Life Lessons to Demystify the SAT® and Boost Your Score by Brooke Higgins available at Amazon.
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