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The test in question is the SAT I: Reasoning Test, commonly
referred to as just the plain old SAT. The modified SAT will
be introduced in March 2005. If you will be a high school
senior graduating and looking to enter college in 2006, you
will take the new exam. If you will be a high school senior
graduating and looking to enter college before 2006, you will
take the current version of the exam.
The Verbal Section Changes
The first change to the Verbal section is its name. On the
new SAT, this section will be called Critical Reading. The
second change to the Verbal section is the elimination of
the analogy questions. This question type is being eliminated
so that this section on the new exam will consist entirely
of critical reading questions that will test reading skills
at the sentence, paragraph, and passage level. The third change
to the Verbal section is the addition of paragraph-length
critical reasoning questions, to supplement the existing question
types of sentence completions and reading comprehension passages.
The topics of the given texts will represent a wide range
of subjects, including science, literature, humanities, and
history.
The Math Section Changes
The Math section of the SAT will also change. Algebra II material
will be tested on the new exam in order to better align the
SAT with the math curriculum being taught in high school classrooms.
The second change to the Math section is the elimination of
quantitative comparisons. The other two current math question
types, 5-choice multiple-choice and student-produced responses,
will remain on the exam.
The New Writing Section - Essay
The biggest change to the SAT will be the introduction of
a new Writing section. The Writing section will consist of
two parts: an essay and a multiple-choice section. Students
will be given 25 minutes to respond to a prompt and construct
a well-organized essay that effectively addresses the task.
The essay question may require students to complete a statement,
to react to a quote or an excerpt, or to agree or disagree
with a point of view. In any case, a good essay will support
the chosen position with specific reasons and examples from
literature, history, art, science, current affairs, or even
a student's own experiences.
Essays will be scored based on the procedures for the current
SAT II: Writing Test. Essays will be graded by two independent
readers on a scale of 1 - 6, and their two scores will be
combined to form an essay subscore that ranges from 2 to 12.
Should the readers' scores vary by more than 2 points, a third
reader will score the essay. The readers will be high school
teachers and college professors who teach composition. To
ensure that essays will be scored in a timely manner, they
will be scanned and made available to readers on the Internet
for grading purposes.
The New Writing Section - Multiple-Choice
The Writing section will also include multiple-choice grammar
and usage questions. Some of these questions will call upon
students to improve given sentences and paragraphs. Others
will present students with sentences and require them to identify
mistakes in diction, grammar, sentence construction, subject-verb
agreement, proper word usage, and wordiness.
The highest possible score on the new Writing section will
be 800. Scores on the essay and multiple-choice section will
be combined to produce a single score. A writing subscore
will also be assigned. The highest possible scores on the
Critical Reading and Math sections will remain 800 each, making
2400 a perfect score on the new SAT.
| NEW SAT - AT A GLANCE |
WHEN IS IT?
|
The first
New SAT will be given in March 2005 |
HOW LONG IS
IT?
|
3 hours,
45 minutes |
HOW IS IT
SCORED?
|
Critical
Reading, Math and Writing sections (200-800 points/section) |
HOW TO REGISTER?
|
www.collegeboard.com |
| |
|
| MATH |
- 44
multiple-choice, 10 grid-in questions
- 70 minute section
- Tougher math, including algebra II
|
| CRITICAL
READING |
- 67
multiple-choice questions
- 70 minute section
- Called "verbal section" on Current SAT; sentence
completion and reading comprehension
|
| WRITING
|
- 49
multiple-choice questions and essay
- 60 minute section
- Grammar, usage, and word choice
|
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