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What is SAT?

The SAT is a standardized test for college admissions in the United States. The SAT is administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS) in the United States and is developed, published, and scored by the College Board.

In the early 1990s, the SAT consisted of six sections: Two math sections (scored together on a 200-800 scale), two verbal sections (scored together on a 200-800 scale), the Test of Standard Written English (scored on a 20-60+ scale), and an equating section. In 1994, the exam was modified, removing antonym questions, and adding math questions that were not multiple choices. The average score on the 1994 modification of the SAT I was usually around 1000 (500 on the verbal, 500 on the math). The most selective schools in the United States (for example, those in the Ivy League) typically had SAT averages exceeding 1400 on the old test.

Beginning with the March 12, 2005 administration of the exam, the SAT Reasoning Test was modified and lengthened. Changes included the removal of analogy questions from the Critical Reading (formerly Verbal) section and quantitative comparisons from the Math section, and the inclusion of a writing section (with an essay) based on the former SAT II Writing Subject Test. The Mathematics section was expanded to cover three years of high school mathematics.

Getting start to prepare for the SAT (Scholastic Assessment Test) can be intimidating. Our goal is to make the first step as easy for you as possible. To perform well on the SAT, you need to draw on a set of skills. The SAT is an important test. It's different from the tests that you're used to taking. On explicitly stated purpose of the SAT is to predict how students will perform academically as college freshmen. But the more practical purpose of the SAT is to help college admission officers make acceptance decisions, because it provides a single, standardized means of comparison. The SAT is a predictable test and can be well prepared through practice. 

 
SAT syllabus: SAT Exam Structure

Sections
10
 
3 Verbal
 
3 Math
 
3 Writing section
 
1 Experiment Section
Time
 
 
3 Hours 45 Minutes
Score
Overall 600-2400
 
Verbal 200-800
 
Math 200-800
 
Writing 200-800
 
Critical Reasoning
3 Section
 
Sentence Completion
 
Reading Comprehension (Long & Short)
Question Type
Multiple Choice
Time
 
 
70 Minutes
(One 20 Min and two 25 Minutes)
Score
200-800
 
Math
3 Section
 
Basic Arithmetic
Geometry
Algebra
Algebra II
Question Type
Multiple Choice
Time
 
 
70 Minutes
(One 20 Min and two 25 Minutes)
Score
200-800
 
 
Writing
3 Section
 
Grammar
Usage
Word Choice
Question Type
Multiple Choice
Essay
Time
 
 
70 Minutes
(One 20 Min and two 25 Minutes)
Score
200-800
 
More Detailed Structure of SAT:  Format of New SAT
 
Section
Time
 Topic's Name
 
No of Question
 
     1
25 minutes
Writing- Essay
1 Essay
 
     2
25 minutes
Critical Reading
Sentence Completion
Short Reading Passages
Long Reading Passages
 
24-28
     3
25 minutes
Mathematics
 
20
     4
25 minutes
Writing- Multiple Choice
 
33-37
     5
25 minutes
Critical Reading
Sentence Completion
Short Reading Passages
Long Reading Passages
 
24-27
     6
25 minutes
Mathematics
Multiple choice
10 Questions
Grid-ins
10 Questions
 
20
      7
20 minutes
Critical Reading
Reading Passages
(possible Sentence Completions)
 
15-20
     8
20 minutes
Mathematics
 
14-15
     9
25 minutes
Critical Reading,
Math,
Writing
 
20-35
     10
10 minutes
Writing- Multiple Choice
Improving Sentences
 
14-15
 
3 Hours 45 Minutes
 

202-212 Questions
 
 

Why Study SAT at Webster?

  • Classes being conducted with American Digi-Syllabus-first time in Nepal
  • Very affordable fee structure
  • Free online access, tests, practices and tutorials for all enrolled students
  • Homely & tranquil ambience
  • Year round class schedules
  • Cozy and small classrooms with projector added tutorials
  • Result-oriented package with individual care
  • Weekly pre & mock test to monitor your progress
  • Latest & wide range of test preparation materials
  • Free test preparation kit with every course
  • Free voice and accent training for all students
  • Native and top notch faculties (foreign university graduates)
  • Central and convenient location
  • Effective learning outcomes
  • Innovative, proven and global teaching strategies
  • Individual attention in small classes
  • Motivating instructors
  • Well equipped modern audio-visual lab
  • Ultra-modern self access lab with computer added tutorials
  • Modern well-equipped library with a wide range of latest books
  • Free Processing for abroad study for all test prep students
  • ETS authorized TOEFL iBT Test Center
  • Unprecedented record of success stories
  • Free online and offline test tutorials and practice materials for Webster students

 

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