@@SetteleTutoring no.. bro.. keep up this pace.. just i am a student in a hurry who has an exam in 5th october. That’s why i am watching videos on a high speed😅
I'm in a pretty weird situation. I'm acing more hard questions and failing more medium-level math questions. Thanks to this I'm stuck in the 1200-1300 range. What can I do to fix this?? It doesn't make sense.
Your memorization might be weak. In the first question I did in this video, did you know what “no solutions” meant right away? There are facts we need to recall right away, once we see certain trigger words. The medium level questions are usually basic stuff that they’ve slightly disguised, so another skill is being able to unmask the question and quickly recognize the basic topic underneath.
how to manage time when i get to module 2 hard ? i both sections . help ! my sat is on 5th oct. I get so nervous when only less than 10 minutes left and there are still many long passages to understand and deal with
That’s an excellent goal! Try to master the grammar, transitions, and outlines. Skip around the passages so that you spend time on the ones you understand the most.
@@haiyen-laura365 Memorize! For the first one, you really can’t hesitate. If you know the rule, then “no solutions” should automatically give you a plan on what to do. My playlists on grammar rules and math formulas cover the most important things to memorize. That’s perfect viewing for this last week.
Hey, new member here :) I was wondering, if we think we mastered the middle, should we do the math module in reverse order (hardest-> easiest)? If so, how much time do you think we should do questions 15-22 in before we go to the easier questions (I won't try to keep attempting a problem I can't do as time will keep running out). Also, would you say the member questions like quadratic twists are medium level or hard level? I found them to be like the ending module 2 math questions (hardest), but idk-- I struggled on them so I wanted to know where I stand. Thank you so much!
Thanks for joining! For your first question, definitely DO NOT start with the hard questions. If you misjudge your timing, you’ll end up having to rush through or guess on the easy ones. It’s always better to lock in the easy points. The “Twists” sets in my member playlists are definitely skewing hard. Sometimes I really pushed the difficulty a little beyond where I think the SAT would even go. If you’re struggling with those, then that’s okay. Just try to absorb the different moves I make to solve them. Similar moves should work on the real SAT. But you’d only get 1 or 2 of that difficulty on any SAT.
If two lines have the same slope and have different y intercepts, then they will never touch hence no solutions. If they have the same slope and same y intercepts then you have two lines directly on top of each other so it’s infinite solutions
@@Krish.Patel0731 YES! Read the instructions for those types of questions. You might be throwing away points. You can’t just arbitrarily round your answers.
Yeah, get it back to y=mx+b and compare the equations. These questions are very formulaic. They might make the equations themselves messier, but the process is the same. Use the lesson linked in the description.
I have no idea! There isn’t a set number. Take a few practice tests and see what the Bluebook app spits out. Most of the time each question will be worth 10-20 points.
Yes, but since it is a free response question you would have to be careful of rounding so -5.1 would be too rounded, so you would want to type exactly what is in your calculator without much rounding
No it wouldn’t. You rounded too much. For free response, you need to use every available space, which is 5 for positive numbers and 6 for negatives. My advice is to enter long decimals as their fraction equivalents.
I am predicting the test will take place on a Saturday for the majority of students
Hmmm, interesting.
This is a very interesting Prediction!
I predict that there will be at least one hard math question.
That’s an awesome prediction man
Aiming for that 1400+
Me too
You can do it!
sameeeee
Thanks a lot! Keep the videos coming; you are saving people's asses here.
Haha I’m working over time to get stuff made!
you are such a talented teacher!!! THANKS ALOT
Wow! Thank you so much!
Finally. I've been waiting for your video for sooo long:)
I hope it was worth the wait!
I watched ur video in 2x speed.. I saved 5 minutes
That’s how I watch all of them too. When I hear myself at regular speed now, I sound like I just got kicked in the head.
@@SetteleTutoring no.. bro.. keep up this pace.. just i am a student in a hurry who has an exam in 5th october. That’s why i am watching videos on a high speed😅
Thnak you very much. Very helpful
You are welcome!
I'm in a pretty weird situation. I'm acing more hard questions and failing more medium-level math questions. Thanks to this I'm stuck in the 1200-1300 range. What can I do to fix this?? It doesn't make sense.
Your memorization might be weak. In the first question I did in this video, did you know what “no solutions” meant right away? There are facts we need to recall right away, once we see certain trigger words. The medium level questions are usually basic stuff that they’ve slightly disguised, so another skill is being able to unmask the question and quickly recognize the basic topic underneath.
how to manage time when i get to module 2 hard ? i both sections . help ! my sat is on 5th oct. I get so nervous when only less than 10 minutes left and there are still many long passages to understand and deal with
It’s the same advice for Reading that I gave for Math: accept that you won’t finish and plan for it.
ruclips.net/video/F70oTd8GEtM/видео.html
aiming for 1200+ as a English Learner
That’s an excellent goal! Try to master the grammar, transitions, and outlines. Skip around the passages so that you spend time on the ones you understand the most.
@@SetteleTutoringcan u give me some advice on how to get these types of questions perfectly? i have done 6 tests, but not getting all these correct
@@haiyen-laura365 Memorize! For the first one, you really can’t hesitate. If you know the rule, then “no solutions” should automatically give you a plan on what to do. My playlists on grammar rules and math formulas cover the most important things to memorize. That’s perfect viewing for this last week.
Hey, new member here :) I was wondering, if we think we mastered the middle, should we do the math module in reverse order (hardest-> easiest)? If so, how much time do you think we should do questions 15-22 in before we go to the easier questions (I won't try to keep attempting a problem I can't do as time will keep running out). Also, would you say the member questions like quadratic twists are medium level or hard level? I found them to be like the ending module 2 math questions (hardest), but idk-- I struggled on them so I wanted to know where I stand. Thank you so much!
Thanks for joining! For your first question, definitely DO NOT start with the hard questions. If you misjudge your timing, you’ll end up having to rush through or guess on the easy ones. It’s always better to lock in the easy points.
The “Twists” sets in my member playlists are definitely skewing hard. Sometimes I really pushed the difficulty a little beyond where I think the SAT would even go. If you’re struggling with those, then that’s okay. Just try to absorb the different moves I make to solve them. Similar moves should work on the real SAT. But you’d only get 1 or 2 of that difficulty on any SAT.
@@SetteleTutoring Okay, got it! Tysm!
is it possible to get 1550+ from current 1300? pls help me - i'm working really hard
If you been practicing like 1 hour+ a day then yea but if your just spending time watching videos and not actually “learning” then it’s gonna be hard.
most of the difficulty of the SAT comes from conceptual errors so yeah big jumps in score in short amounts of time is totally possible
most of the difficulty of the SAT comes from conceptual errors so yeah big jumps in score in short amounts of time is totally possible
Nothing is impossible if everything favours you but don't be too delusional at the same time
yes, I went from a 1370 to a 1440 in a day just by doing more practice questions
why no solutions = same slope?, and what if they asking for b in question 1?
If two lines have the same slope and have different y intercepts, then they will never touch hence no solutions. If they have the same slope and same y intercepts then you have two lines directly on top of each other so it’s infinite solutions
@@rzmeme5846 ohh i see thx
Watch the video!
ruclips.net/video/CA7I6XK53Nw/видео.html
is -5.14 correct on the first question?
yes, -36/7 = -5.14
Technically no because you would need to use all 5 numerical spaces (6 total with the negative). So it would need to be -5.142 or -5.143
It’s easy to get sucked into one or two questions. Very important to keep moving and prepare to have to guess on a few.
@@SetteleTutoring do you have to use all 5 numerical spaces (i don't use them all some time) - am i doing something wrong?
@@Krish.Patel0731 YES! Read the instructions for those types of questions. You might be throwing away points. You can’t just arbitrarily round your answers.
any tips for the nonlinear functions with multiple constants questions like the first one ?
Yeah, get it back to y=mx+b and compare the equations. These questions are very formulaic. They might make the equations themselves messier, but the process is the same. Use the lesson linked in the description.
Oh NONLINEAR. That’s this lesson:
ruclips.net/video/iN2ZPbPIJNo/видео.html
How many questions do i need to get right to get at least a 1400 score???
I have no idea! There isn’t a set number. Take a few practice tests and see what the Bluebook app spits out. Most of the time each question will be worth 10-20 points.
would -5.1 also work for the first question?
Yes, but since it is a free response question you would have to be careful of rounding so -5.1 would be too rounded, so you would want to type exactly what is in your calculator without much rounding
No it wouldn’t. You rounded too much. For free response, you need to use every available space, which is 5 for positive numbers and 6 for negatives. My advice is to enter long decimals as their fraction equivalents.