Sounds good and is probably the right decision for everyone concerned.https://www.freep.com/story/sports/...gan-football-amauri-pesek-hickson/2767007002/
tells him to attend prep school. Come back in 2020. They needed room for a defensive lineman.
Sounds good and is probably the right decision for everyone concerned.https://www.freep.com/story/sports/...gan-football-amauri-pesek-hickson/2767007002/
tells him to attend prep school. Come back in 2020. They needed room for a defensive lineman.
Pretty sure the recruit and his father disagree...Sounds good and is probably the right decision for everyone concerned.
Another variation. Frequently have a hilarious answer when the teacher asks a simple question. Back in the good old days teachers weren't inclined to take a whole lot of disruption from some kid. Resulting GPA wasn't homework and test dependent.I had a higher ACT than that with a pretty unimpressive GPA. All you have to do is not do the homework and the crappy GPA takes care of itself even if you ace tests and never skip class.
I have not read that anywhere. Pretty tough I would think to do that when the questions are randomized. At least it always used to be that no 2 tests had the same sequence of test questions so you had to be able to read the question and then find it on your own test if you wanted to cheat. I used to chuckle in monetary and fiscal analysis when a kid who often missed class would peer over at my answer sheet on a multiple choice test when I knew that the questions were randomized. He had no clue. Stupid business major who I'm sure probably flunked out.Things like her right and wrong answers being in similar patterns to those around her, as well as almost no scratchwork in her test booklet, especially in parts where needed.
I have not read that anywhere. Pretty tough I would think to do that when the questions are randomized. At least it always used to be that no 2 tests had the same sequence of test questions so you had to be able to read the question and then find it on your own test if you wanted to cheat. I used to chuckle in monetary and fiscal analysis when a kid who often missed class would peer over at my answer sheet on a multiple choice test when I knew that the questions were randomized. He had no clue. Stupid business major who I'm sure probably flunked out.
It's so the actual questions don't get out. I had a friend who wrote questions for the ACT. The questions in any given year if I remember correctly were the same in any given test, but the order they appeared in the section was randomized. That makes it virtually impossible for a kid to cheat off of a neighbor's answer sheet. IF the actual booklet gets out, it makes it very easy for somebody to prep for the next round of questions which if not identical will be very similar. I can not imagine how someone could cheat by looking at a neighbor's test. I think that would be horribly self defeating. On the other hand IF you could get the questions far enough in advance of the test that would be another story.I’ve proctored the ACT countless times, but admittedly don’t know about the SAT and the test question order. Either way, there is a reason why I have to collect the books afterword, which I assume is the same with the SAT.