Anonymous wrote:The math second module was way harder than any practice blue book test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do scores come back faster with digital?
Yes- about two weeks for scores according to College Board. Score for the March 9th test should be released on March 22nd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DSAT is much shorter now due to it being an adaptive test. Lots of other advantages. ACT will need to adjust to be competitive
Not just shorter, but I’m hearing there is more time to complete the answers. Levels the playing field for all those who can’t afford a neuropsych eval or aren’t willing to game the system to get extra time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DSAT is much shorter now due to it being an adaptive test. Lots of other advantages. ACT will need to adjust to be competitive
Not just shorter, but I’m hearing there is more time to complete the answers. Levels the playing field for all those who can’t afford a neuropsych eval or aren’t willing to game the system to get extra time.
Anonymous wrote:Do scores come back faster with digital?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Digital is better for kids who work more slowly and have trouble finishing. Paper is better for the ones who have a tendency to rush and make silly mistakes.
Why? Digital doesn't allow reviewing and changing answers?
Or paper scoring is more tolerant of errors?
DP: The paper version doesn't penalize wrong answers and it doesn't matter if you answers questions wrong in the beginning or end of the section--your score is determined by how many you got correct. All questions are weighted the same.
Digital version questions are not weighted the same AND if you make careless errors in the beginning of the test (first module), you will not be able to go back and fix them on the second module. Your score will also be capped if you do not perform well enough to be given the harder second module.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Digital is better for kids who work more slowly and have trouble finishing. Paper is better for the ones who have a tendency to rush and make silly mistakes.
Why? Digital doesn't allow reviewing and changing answers?
Or paper scoring is more tolerant of errors?
Anonymous wrote:Digital is better for kids who work more slowly and have trouble finishing. Paper is better for the ones who have a tendency to rush and make silly mistakes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DSAT is much shorter now due to it being an adaptive test. Lots of other advantages. ACT will need to adjust to be competitive
Not just shorter, but I’m hearing there is more time to complete the answers. Levels the playing field for all those who can’t afford a neuropsych eval or aren’t willing to game the system to get extra time.