


Bild 1: Table of Contents
Table of Contents
1 SAT Practice Test #1 ………………………………………………………………………………… 11
Reading Test 17
Writing and Language Test 35
Math Test – No Calculator 55
Math Test – Calculator 63
Answers to Test #1 85
2 SAT Practice Test #2 ………………………………………………………………………………… 119
Reading Test 125
Writing and Language Test 145
Math Test – No Calculator 165
Math Test – Calculator 173
Answers to Test #2 193
3 SAT Practice Test #3 ………………………………………………………………………………… 229
Reading Test 235
Writing and Language Test 255
Math Test – No Calculator 273
Math Test – Calculator 279
Answers to Test #3 299
4 SAT Practice Test #4 ………………………………………………………………………………… 331
Reading Test 337
Writing and Language Test 355
Math Test – No Calculator 373
Math Test – Calculator 381
Answers to Test #4 399
5 SAT Practice Test #5 ………………………………………………………………………………… 431
Reading Test 437
Writing and Language Test 457
Math Test – No Calculator 477
Math Test – Calculator 491
Answers to Test #5 499
Bild 2: SAT Books in Test Prep Series
SAT Books in Test Prep Series
343 SAT Math Practice Questions
Price: $19.95 | ISBN: 978-1-946383-92-1
343 SAT Math Practice Questions offers hundreds of realistic Math questions for that extra practice you need for cracking the SAT Math. Just like the redesigned SAT Math, this book includes questions in all the four essential areas of Math: Problem Solving and Data Analysis, Heart of Algebra, Passport to Advanced Math and Additional Topics in Math. These practice questions exemplify different ways in which the questions may be presented in the test, cover the complete range of difficulty levels and include answer explanations with strategies that help you reach the perfect score.
SAT Essay Writing Guide with Sample Prompts
Price: $19.95 | ISBN: 978-1-946383-90-7
SAT Essay Writing Guide with Sample Prompts is your guide to a perfect SAT essay score. The proven way to get that perfect score on the SAT essay is through lots and lots of practice; this book offers exactly that! It has sixteen sample prompts in line with the SAT guidelines, followed by passages from high-quality published source, pre-writing guidance, plenty of strategies and a sample essay response.
Bild 3 & 4: Reading Test
Reading Test
65 MINUTES, 52 QUESTIONS
DIRECTIONS
Turn to Section 1 of your answer sheet to answer the questions in this section.
DIRECTIONS
Each passage or pair of passages below is followed by a number of questions. After reading each passage, choose the best answer to each question based on what is stated or implied in the passage or in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).
Questions 1-10 are based on the following passage.
This passage is from Arlette Broncoth, The Seamstress, originally published in 1927.
It took me no more than a month to realise
that I had made a grave error in both my choice
of employment and my employer. In truth, in
Line 5 such times as these, it wasless a choice of
whether to work at all. Mrs. Van Doren had
vacancies and that was all there had been to it.
At the time it did not occur to me why that was
always the case. Nobody likes to admit their own
10 day in Tenton I found my work an irritation.
from coarse broadcloth in colours as drab as my
15 tedium! Each garment was so alike that even when
assigned a new model, the design lacked such
imagination as to be virtually indistinguishable
from the last, even a double seam or an extra row
of pin-tucking could have alleviated the tedium
20 for an hour or so, but even that was denied me.
I am not wholly impatient, and realise that in order
to make my own way in the world (as I had vowed
I would do) and espouse the role of seamstress I
25 could have borne the stagnation of my creative
faculties; my imagination would not have begun
to scream in the prison of my mind that there was
more to this than the work that progressed beneath
30 sigh and each escaping tear of loss and regret even
as my desire for freedom grew. No, if that were all,
I should have submitted to Fate’s dictates, bowing
to the will of her twin handmaidens, Duty and
Humility. I should have cherished my dreams as
35 released me from the drudgery of the day. But
my aversion to Mrs. Van Doran and her clear
began to grow, pressing me down into that well
40 called Despair. Each morning its weight pushed me
further and further into the poisonous slurry and
solitary darkness that lay at its bottom.
I cannot adequately express the women’s
antipathy toward me, for it surrounded her
45 like a miasma. From the very moment of our
acquaintance it seemed prompted by my merest
glance or gesture. It grew with each dress I
50 teedium! Each garment was so alike that even when
assigned a new model, the design lacked such
imagination as to be virtually indistinguishable
from the last, even a double seam or an extra row
of pin-tucking could have alleviated the tedium
for an hour or so, but even that was denied me.
I am not wholly impatient, and realise that in order
to make my own way in the world (as I had vowed
I would do) and espouse the role of seamstress I
55 found fault, no matter how hard she tried. She sneered at
my cultured tones and tutored bearing, and became
irritated by my skilled workmanship, her mouth
a thin, hard line and her small, close-set eyes no
warmer than the polished jet beads she wore around
60 deserve it, I knew the source of her dislike—a small,
ugly, green-eyed creature—for in no case could
she call herself my superior, save in years. I had
skills equal to her own, and believe she suspected
that I had a mental store that far surpassed hers.
65 I tried to keep it hidden, and, of a certainty, if she
small envelope containing my precious wages,
70 startled by the joy it gave me. Not for itself, though
it would pay for my lodgings and provide enough
sustenance to keep me on the mortal plane (though
little more), but the sheer glee of knowing Mrs Van
Doren begrudged every cent of it, but was powerless
75 to prevent my having it. As I walked to my lodging
that my evening meal would be spent alone, my
footsteps hammered out two incessant thoughts on
the cold, hard stone. “Dorothea, this torment must
80 end,” said one. “How?” demanded the other. I pulled
out my latchkey, noting that no cheery glow greeted
me, and I resolved at that moment that every ounce
of my not inconsiderable will should be bent on
answering that question. How?
1
Which choice best summarizes the passage?
A) A young woman’s experience of life begins in
hope but ends in despair.
B) The passage focuses on the narrator’s internal struggle with her employer.
C) The narrator’s supervisor’s animosity makes it
intolerable and considers why.
D) A character regrets a choice but determines to
stand by her decision.
2
primarily serve to
A) establish a chronology for the events that
follow.
B) suggest a foundation for Van Doren’s position.
C) indicate the narrator’s reason for repentance.
D) contextualize the narrator’s current emotions.