[October SAT] Top 5 HARDEST SAT Math Questions You MUST Understand

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 140

  • @PrepworksEducation
    @PrepworksEducation  Před 24 dny +2

    let us know which of the adjectives in the description was your favorite 😜

  • @r22gamer54
    @r22gamer54 Před 27 dny +34

    honestly for #1 there is a way quicker way of doing it. Equilateral traingle has 60 60 60. If u split it in half it becomes 30 60 90 triangle so ur height is 8rt3. Then u just get the area of the triangle and subtract by the sector area of 1 circle x 3. which is pretty quick. Way faster method :)

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 27 dny +7

      That is true! Using special triangles is a great hack.

    • @Mo1-o5p
      @Mo1-o5p Před 26 dny +2

      You are amazing

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 26 dny +1

      Thanks!!

    • @jade88104
      @jade88104 Před 23 dny

      Why 8 rt 3?

    • @gamemakingkirb667
      @gamemakingkirb667 Před 23 dny +2

      That does speed up the process of finding the area of the triangle, yes, but, since equilateral triangles are so common and you’re already willing to memorize triangle formulas, knowing the formula for an equilateral triangle would be fastest.
      But if you really want the fast way for this problem, look at the answer choices. Only one had positive area :(. Would’ve been cooler if they made it one of the typed ones (though I doubt anyone would agree with me on that lmao)

  • @h1ki_komori638
    @h1ki_komori638 Před 28 dny +13

    in question 2 i made an equation s=20+2(2x) since they are equal
    and let seniors be y, therefore we get an equation y+2x=80, i typed those equations in desmos and found the point of intersection

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 28 dny

      Great way to solve!

    • @s0phadays
      @s0phadays Před 24 dny +1

      thats smart

    • @DecimusCaesar
      @DecimusCaesar Před 23 dny +1

      Good use of desmos. It's funny that you just can use desmos to easily solve all algebraic problems (as long as you comprehend the subject at its bare minimum level)

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny

      Very true! Desmos makes everything quicker.

  • @shubhamgamer5213
    @shubhamgamer5213 Před 27 dny +3

    13:48 Well the thing i like the most about SAT questions that even if u didn't know about the depth of the chapter or anything about chapter from which question is asked still by keeping the basic in your mind by using simple logic you can able to tell answer the question

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 27 dny

      Exactly! SAT Math is also a test of your problem-solving abilities.

  • @mannatkukreja3188
    @mannatkukreja3188 Před 25 dny +5

    In question number 3, we can just do area of sector= 30/360 pi.r^2 and area of square =r^2, since r is the squares side. then when we divide the two we'll have 30/360pi=pi/12

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 25 dny +1

      Yup! This works too! Sometimes, on the SAT, it's easier just to multiply stuff out (especially if it's like 3*3) so you don't get confused.

    • @gamemakingkirb667
      @gamemakingkirb667 Před 23 dny +1

      Thanks! I thought I was doing some unnecessary math when I kept seeing the same numbers

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny +1

      Yup, we get that. Unfortunately, the time constraints make it easy to second-guess yourself.

  • @RaghavPant-xu6jt
    @RaghavPant-xu6jt Před 18 dny +1

    The fifth problem is actually the easiest, since the the ratio of areas is 1/25, then ratios of circumference will be 1/5. Now think of the larger circle's circumference 5 times bigger, then the smaller circle covered 2/5 of the total perimeter. Now just multiply 2/5 to 360 as in the total angle of bigger circle which gives x as 144.

  • @pastpaperprocrastinator
    @pastpaperprocrastinator Před 19 dny +1

    The last one is way easier than shown. Once you get the distance traveled by the smaller circle (4pi), you can then figure out x by doing 4pi=5x to get the angle with the larger circle's circumference. You end up with 4pi/5, which converted into degrees is 144 degrees.

  • @Abhishek-no3nl
    @Abhishek-no3nl Před 23 dny +6

    I think that everyone here got the last question wrong.
    This is because of something called coin rotation paradox. The circle not only moves in the length of the circumference but it also goes around the circle. so the angle covered by it will actually be 2-2/6 *72=10/6*72=120 .
    so the answer will be 120 degrees.

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny +4

      Hey, we've gone over the coin rotation paradox in this comment section already. It doesn't apply here because a) we're not completing a full set of rotations around the entire larger circle and b) the radii are different lengths.

    • @anonymoushere7786
      @anonymoushere7786 Před dnem

      Man I did the same after watching the paradox and I got 120 degrees but why is the answer different here?

    • @anonymoushere7786
      @anonymoushere7786 Před dnem

      ​@@PrepworksEducationCoin rotation paradox is applied for different radii too

  • @shubhamgamer5213
    @shubhamgamer5213 Před 27 dny +3

    2:12 Well i want to point out there is a formal for funding area of a equilateral triangle
    "√3/4*A^2"(A= side length of equilateral triangle)
    I didn't know if there will any deduction in marks for using this formula because it is not given in SAT syllabus but if a MCQ question will come then you can use this from as cheat code to find the area really fast and getting rid of finding H by using Pythagoras

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 27 dny +4

      There's no syllabus for the SAT, so I'm not sure what you're referring to. You also don't need to show work, so as long as your answer is right, you're 100% correct in the eyes of CB.

    • @shubhamgamer5213
      @shubhamgamer5213 Před 27 dny +1

      👍😀​@@PrepworksEducation

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 27 dny +1

      Of course!

  • @diamondage4407
    @diamondage4407 Před 13 dny

    for the circles question it took me 30 seconds since it makes sense, I just did 30/360 and got 1/12, and just placed pi instead of 1 and boom that's the answer

  • @dnnstuff8087
    @dnnstuff8087 Před 18 dny +1

    For 4 I just made the equation (r^2*pi*(1/12))/r^2
    Turns out that there is no need to find the radius since we are going to divide it out anyways.

  • @mia1535
    @mia1535 Před 25 dny +2

    i’m just beginning my journey of preparation for the SAT and clicking on this video i was very scared, telling myself that this is the absolute worst that can happen. however having stopped the video before the solution for each question and doing it by myself i am now so relieved because these questions were so easy that i thought it was a mean joke lol. now i’m not worried at all 😂

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 24 dny

      Haha, then you are perfectly fine for the SAT Math section!!

    • @Jake-cc7ie
      @Jake-cc7ie Před 22 dny +2

      You might want to make sure you also have a good grasp on quadratics. The Digital SAT test makers seem to really like these near the end of module 2 math

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny

      @@Jake-cc7ie Very true! They've trended towards that lately.

    • @chemist_biologist
      @chemist_biologist Před 22 dny +1

      This comment shows how dumb i am lol.

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny +1

      You’re not dumb! Maybe you just need a little more practice :)

  • @terrariariley1643
    @terrariariley1643 Před 23 dny +2

    I instantly knew what to do for the circle one and stuff but instead of wasting time on the right triangle i used herons formula and since you get a calculator this easy

  • @mujtabaalam5907
    @mujtabaalam5907 Před 15 dny +1

    Which test is number 5 from? Also, if the two circles were of equal size, would the answer be 360 degrees or 720 degrees?

  • @FaiajFida
    @FaiajFida Před 27 dny +1

    I would like to point out that the correct answer for problem V is not 144 degrees but 130.9 degrees due to the smaller circle travelling around a slightly bigger radius which is 5.5pi. Veritasium made a video about this problem you can check out if you want.

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 27 dny +1

      Is this about the rolling coin paradox?
      The problem explicitly states the number of rotations thereby bypassing this paradox. It’s not testing whether you understand how rotations are counted…

    • @hadimohammad1814
      @hadimohammad1814 Před 25 dny +1

      ​​​@@PrepworksEducation I think he/she is right because if the circle completes two rotations over that arc, that means the length of the arc is not twice its circumference, but it's equal to it
      number of rotations = ratio of circumstances + 1
      And I think that x should be Acute and equals 1/5 of 360 which is 72°

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 25 dny +2

      No, that only applies if it goes all the way around. The Veritasium video question asks how many revolutions the circle took, where this gives you (essentially) the number of revolutions. You can try it out for yourself at home.

  • @vortexfitness44
    @vortexfitness44 Před 23 dny +2

    somehow I found #1 to be the toughest because I misinterpreted the base and heigh to both be 16 lol
    #2 was confusing but #5 I got 144 by literally using r=1 and r=5 for the two circles and finding the circumference of each by pi r^2. Then I set up a ratio of two times the circumference of circle A/ circumference of circle B= x/360 to find x=144. It was tedious but it's doable

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny

      That's the story of a lot of SAT math -- not enough time, dumb mistakes, busywork steps...

  • @kaidarizz
    @kaidarizz Před 26 dny +1

    I think last one can be solved just a little faster. So as we know the ratio of areas A and B is 1/25, which mans that their circumference ratio is 1/5. The length of the arc(of the bigger circle) is (x/360)2pi r, and is equal to 2 circumferences of circle A( 2 x 2pi r"2"). However, as I previously mentioned the ratio is 1/5 meaning that (2 x 2pi r)/5 will be the circumference of A in terms of circumference B. Therefore, (x/360)2 pi r = (4pi r)/5, and from there we will find out that the answer is 144

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 26 dny

      Sure, you could solve it that way! Whatever works for you -- always remember that SAT questions have multiple ways to solve in almost every scenario.

    • @s0phadays
      @s0phadays Před 23 dny +1

      how did u know circ ratio was 1/5?

    • @kaidarizz
      @kaidarizz Před 23 dny +1

      @@s0phadays it was given that the area ratio is 1/25, which is the ratio of their radiuses(circumference) squared (this is area ratio rule/formula)

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny

      Yup, exactly!

  • @andrewcuber8968
    @andrewcuber8968 Před 22 dny +2

    for question 4 theres honestly no reason to find the area, cuz it says to find the fraction. so the shaded area is (1/12)pi(r^2), cuz its 30/360 is 1/12 (so that shaded area is 1/12 of the area the circle is). the area of the square is r^2. so the fraction we are trying to find is ((1/12)pi(r^2))/(r^2). r^2 cancels on the top and bottom, so we are left with (1/12)pi

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny +2

      Very true! We just wanted to give concrete examples instead of putting everything in variables. On the SAT itself, it might take more time to think about how you could do it with variables than just doing it with numbers (brute force).

    • @andrewcuber8968
      @andrewcuber8968 Před 22 dny +2

      @@PrepworksEducation thanks!

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny +2

      Of course!

  • @SEWEYFOOTBAL
    @SEWEYFOOTBAL Před 23 dny +5

    1 is the hardest and everything else is pretty hard imo

  • @ioioindahood5583
    @ioioindahood5583 Před 28 dny +2

    for number Q number 2- 2(2x)+20+2x=80, where x is the number of sophomores or juniors.

  • @darkmatter6720
    @darkmatter6720 Před 23 dny +3

    As a indian I had no issues solving these

  • @navkiransandhu3323
    @navkiransandhu3323 Před 24 dny +4

    For the second solution can seniors not also be equal to 50? Because then there are 15 juniors and 15 sophmores, and 20 freshman. A total of 100 students 20% are freshman. Does 50 seniors not meet all the rquirements of the problem?

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny

      Unfortunately, no. The number of seniors must be 20 more than TWICE the number of sophomores & juniors added together. 2(15 + 15) + 20 = 80, which can't be possible because then there would be no seniors at all.

    • @navkiransandhu3323
      @navkiransandhu3323 Před 23 dny +1

      @@PrepworksEducation oh okay, thanks for the clarification!

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny

      @@navkiransandhu3323 No problem! Be sure to check out our other SAT videos.

    • @anubhavraj9167
      @anubhavraj9167 Před 22 dny +2

      ​@@PrepworksEducation I think the equation in your response above should've been 2(15 + 15) + 50 = 80, or 2(15 + 15) + 20 = 50. 50 does work, since 15 +15 = 30, and 20 more than 30 is 50. 15 soph, 15 jun, 50 seniors = 80, also = 80%. the remaining group is freshman, which has been given as 20, or 20%.

    • @anubhavraj9167
      @anubhavraj9167 Před 22 dny +2

      @@PrepworksEducation In your answer in the video, you said there are 60 seniors, but then your equation (20 + 2(x+x)) doesn't check out because then Sophomores have to equal to 20, and Juniors have to equal to 20 for sen=60.

  • @quillerity07
    @quillerity07 Před 28 dny +6

    in qn 2, how tf did u suppose 40=20 + 2soph and also,
    seniors is actually = 20+2*(2 soph) because sen =20+2(soph+jun) and jun = soph
    in your video , you got soph =10 but
    when you plug that value in the eqn of senior, you will get seth like
    =20+2 *(10+10)
    =60 ? and you supposed senior =40 ? tf ? and after that you said senior =60, that's hella confusing and maybe not right

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 28 dny +3

      Hey, I did an in-between step you might've missed.
      The question states that the number of seniors is 20 more than twice the number of sophomores and juniors. We also know that the number of freshmen is 20 and 20%; thus, soph + jun + sen = 80 because each person is 1%.
      We know that seniors - 20 = 2(soph + juniors) from the problem. Both sides of this equation should be equal; since there are 2 sides to the equation, each side must be 40. I simply added the 20 to both sides in advance.
      Here, you can take the left half of the equation, which again we know to be equal to 40, and do seniors - 20 = 40 and add 20 to both sides to get 60. If you saw the check in the video, you'll know that this is the correct answer.
      If this was confusing, you may want to consider a simpler approach like this:
      20 freshmen = 20%, so 80% = 80 seniors + juniors + fresh
      80 = 2(x+x) + 20 + 2x
      80 = 4x + 20 + 2x
      80 = 6x + 20
      60 = 6x
      x = 10
      soph + junior = 10 + 10 = 20
      80-20 = 60

    • @quillerity07
      @quillerity07 Před 28 dny +1

      @@PrepworksEducation yea i myself did it this way but that senior =40 was a bit confusing. Anyways, great video

    • @withIn40
      @withIn40 Před 28 dny +4

      Hey! Allow me to help you. 40 = 20 + 2 x soph, I suppose he resulted in such calculation because within the question it is stated that the number of juniors is equal to the number of sophomores. Considering that the numbers of seniors are 20 more than the sum of juniors and sophomores (which is the same, basically, because the numbers of juniors = the numbers of sophomores).
      I did the calculation like this:
      let x = the numbers of juniors
      y = the numbers of sophomores
      z = the numbes of seniors
      by the question, it is known that x = y. Thus,
      z = 20 + 2(x+y) = 20 + 2(x+x) = 20 + 2 (y+y) -- because x is y and y is x
      z = 20 + 2 (2x) = 20 + 4x.
      z = 20 + 4x.
      Now, given the fact that the number of freshman are 20, and 80% of the club members are constituted of seniors, sophomores, and juniors, we can understand that 20% of the club members are freshman, and that very 20% of the club is 20 (because the numbers of freshman are 20).
      Those calculations imply that if 20 freshman make up 20% of the club, the club members in total must be 100. So the rest of the members (100-20) is the total numbes of juniors, sophomores, and seniors. Given that we have written the equation, and we know that the total numbers of numbers of juniors, sophomores, and seniors are 80, that means:
      x + y +z = 80
      x + x + 20 + 4x = 80
      6x + 20 = 80
      6x = 60
      x = 10.
      Because x is 10, y must also be 10, which in total results that the number of sophomores and juniors altogether are 20. Those calculations boil down to the numbers of seniors, which basically is just 80 - (numbers of juniors and sophomores) = 80 - 20 = 60.
      We can also check it using our z equation:
      z = 20 + 4x
      z = 20 + 4(10)
      z = 60.
      So the numbers of seniors are 60 people.
      Hope this helps

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 28 dny +1

      @@withIn40 Great explanation!

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 28 dny +1

      @@quillerity07 Thanks! 😁😁

  • @andrew-bruh
    @andrew-bruh Před 24 dny +1

    in q4 i dont think we even need to find radius. as it will cancel out in the end and we will get the answer without needing it.

  • @chienbin4813
    @chienbin4813 Před 22 dny +1

    they are pretty easy except question 2 because i could not understand it properly (English is not my native language). Sadly, i was forced to take an ielts test not the SAT🙂

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny

      Makes sense. A lot of SAT Math questions are more reading comprehension than actual mathematics.

  • @shivamkole2679
    @shivamkole2679 Před 24 dny +1

    in the 2nd question, how did you just assume that the number of seniors is 40 and then solve the equation to get 60? Also the equation that you wrote which is "seniors = 20 + 2(soph)" should have been "seniors = 20 +2(2soph) = 20 + 4(soph)" (timestamp 8:57)

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 24 dny

      Yeah, I took a couple of shortcuts. I explained my reasoning in another comment somewhere here… lmk if you can’t find it and I can repost.

    • @shivamkole2679
      @shivamkole2679 Před 22 dny

      @@PrepworksEducation I can't find the comment where you've explained the reasoning. Could you please repost it on this comment. Thanks

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny

      @@shivamkole2679 Here:
      “Hey, I did an in-between step you might've missed.
      The question states that the number of seniors is 20 more than twice the number of sophomores and juniors. We also know that the number of freshmen is 20 and 20%; thus, soph + jun + sen = 80 because each person is 1%.
      We know that seniors - 20 = 2(soph + juniors) from the problem. Both sides of this equation should be equal; since there are 2 sides to the equation, each side must be 40. I simply added the 20 to both sides in advance.
      Here, you can take the left half of the equation, which again we know to be equal to 40, and do seniors - 20 = 40 and add 20 to both sides to get 60. If you saw the check in the video, you'll know that this is the correct answer.
      If this was confusing, you may want to consider a simpler approach like this:
      20 freshmen = 20%, so 80% = 80 seniors + juniors + fresh
      80 = 2(x+x) + 20 + 2x
      80 = 4x + 20 + 2x
      80 = 6x + 20
      60 = 6x
      x = 10
      soph + junior = 10 + 10 = 20
      80-20 = 60”

  • @gunjanpunn-mr1in
    @gunjanpunn-mr1in Před 20 dny +1

    Bro I got 1080 on my practice test and I recently watch ur both vid can u give me some tips to improve my sat score before exam

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 20 dny

      My best tips!!! 10 EASY Hacks to Increase SAT Score 100+ Points (NO STUDYING!)
      czcams.com/video/fqvQDqdhAfI/video.html

  • @abdulghanirami6209
    @abdulghanirami6209 Před 27 dny +1

    For question 5 I didn’t get what multiplying 2pie by 2 does the question generally confused me could you explain it again? Please.

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 26 dny +1

      We multiply 2pi by 2 because the small circle rolls around the larger one two times. If I were to mark a point on the edge of the small circle, we'd see that as we roll it, that point would travel 2pi twice (two circumferences of the circle). Does that help?

  • @pimkez
    @pimkez Před 25 dny +1

    for question 5, i had no idea what to do going in but i think some sort of weird coincidence happened maybe where i accidentally solved it. i figured the scale factor from a to b was 1 to 5, and i also noticed that circle a went around twice which meant it spun a total of 720°. so then i completely guessed that this might've meant that 720 divided by the scale factor of 5 (144) would equal x° in circle B. it was a complete guess, but it yielded the right answer. this was just a coincidence though, right? or was there actually some direction to it? i'd appreciate any input!

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 24 dny +1

      Sounds like this method would work! I'm going to translate into radians to show my logic since we can then work in a discussion of circumference:
      Circle spins 4pi times (i.e. 4pi*r of circumference). Divide this by the circumference of the larger object (5pi*r) -- scale factor of 5 is factored in as we would have 4pir/5pir, and the pi*r cancels out. So, yeah, that should work :)

    • @rxdhikc
      @rxdhikc Před 8 dny

      ​@@PrepworksEducation Hey I also feel like I got the last question right coincidentally! First I found out that the circumference of the bigger circle was 5 times the circumfrence of the smaller circle which meant that the smaller circle completed the 360 degrees of the bigger circle by going through 5 equal angles or 360/5 which got me the value 72 degrees for each part. I also figured out the scale factor and realised that x was twice of 72 and got x=144 degrees.

  • @MaryamSa-b2b
    @MaryamSa-b2b Před 7 dny

    Are there 22 questions in each maths module or 27??
    As for english is it also 66 in total or less?

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 7 dny

      Hey, there are 27 Qs for each English module. 22 Qs for each math module.

    • @MaryamSa-b2b
      @MaryamSa-b2b Před 7 dny

      @@PrepworksEducation ok many tnxxx 👍

  • @Yeah_its_desi
    @Yeah_its_desi Před 21 dnem

    Although I am from different country, but these were pretty basic qsns.. I wish I could give this exam 😢😂

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 21 dnem

      Haha, there are very stark differences between education systems… 🤷‍♂️🤗

  • @millenium9368
    @millenium9368 Před 23 dny

    How many problems are there in the sat and how much time do students have? Because these problems seem very easy for the "hardest ever" and unless you have like 1min per question all of the students should get very high results

    • @millenium9368
      @millenium9368 Před 23 dny

      Especially if desmos is allowed which makes half of the questions just plugging stuff in there and righting down the answer

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 23 dny

      Students receive about 1.5 minutes per question. Most of the math on the SAT is straightforward, you do not even need to have learned Algebra 2. However, it is critical to solve the last couple Module 2 questions which emulate the ones seen in the videos in order to score 750+

  • @user-my1im4bh7h
    @user-my1im4bh7h Před 24 dny

    Ok questions were easier than I thought

  • @Spo_ng
    @Spo_ng Před 27 dny +2

    Nice video

  • @mateo301
    @mateo301 Před 24 dny +1

    All solved without under 5min

  • @user-qc9cd5iz3l
    @user-qc9cd5iz3l Před 20 dny

    I bet class 10 CBSE students can easily solve first three and any class 11 JEE aspirant can easily solve ANY of these questions

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 20 dny +1

      There are differences in mathematical abilities across regions!

  • @ocean_blvd
    @ocean_blvd Před 22 dny

    I think I'm cooked

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 22 dny

      You’re fine! These typically would only show up at the end of Module 2. You could miss these and still end up with a 750-770+ on math granted you took care of business on the rest of the exam.

  • @Brillarex7127
    @Brillarex7127 Před 21 dnem +1

    This is hard? Is this a joke or.

  • @vallabhagrawalla
    @vallabhagrawalla Před 19 dny

    uhmmm i can solve these with like 13 year old me's math level from india(all under 30 secs....)

    • @vallabhagrawalla
      @vallabhagrawalla Před 19 dny

      (loved the video) honestly, after watching your video i might consider giving the sats in 2-3 years when i'm of age, they seem pretty easy

    • @PrepworksEducation
      @PrepworksEducation  Před 19 dny

      Thank you! And yes, it seems that a lot of international students find the SAT pretty easy. You can definitely tackle the math, but you may want to study up for the English section.

  • @jxtk3154
    @jxtk3154 Před 22 dny

    All of em were easy asf bruh