| If you are taking the Regents Sequential III exam, you have probably alreadytaken the Sequential I and II exams, so this will be d6j~ vu for you. But just inease you have a bad memory, here is what you need to know. 1. Not only are you allowed to use a scientific calculator for the exam, you MUST use one. The calculator must have logarithmic and trigonomet- ric features. It MAY NOT have infrared communication ability (for ob- vious reasons), and it may have statistical functions, ~, and other cool features. It MAY NOT be a graphing calculator. 2. You must have a straight edge and should probably bring a compass. 3. You are supposed to be provided with blank paper for writing Part II answers, and graph paper (for graphing), but we wouldn't take any chances if we were youl In other words, come preparedl 4. You have to take the test in blue or black pen. You may only use pencil for graphs and diagrams.SCORINGThere is no partial credit for Part I of the test. There are 35 questions andyou must answer 30 of them. There is usually a "Probability" question that can be time-consuming.you don't know how to do it, skip it. Remember that about two-thirds of Part I is multiple choice, which meansthat there are Princeton Review techniques that you can use to get the rightanswer (we'll get to them in a little bit). So, you will probably prefer to skipa question that is not multiple choice and stick to the ones that are. The test is NOT in order of difficulty. However, you will probably find thatPart I stuffis much easier than Part II stuff. Most of the difficulty will comefrom how well you know the material. If you are weak in trigonometry, youaro going to have a very difficult time with this test.Taking the Regents Exam ~ |
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