Wednesday 3 October 2012

American History Timeline

So, I haven't touched this blog in awhile. It hasn't been clear to me what to do with it. Google tells me that actual human beings have read my silly little posts. I'm kind of ashamed. This is the public face of Priya Ramsey.

You probably want to know what I've been up to. Maybe you're a friend. Maybe you don't know me. Maybe you wonder if I even exist. Well, sir, I exist enough to write this blog post. That should be enough for you, mysterious internet denizen.

Denizen. That's a curious word. Definition:


den·i·zen

  [den-uh-zuhn]  Show IPA
noun
1.
an inhabitant; resident.
2.
a person who regularly frequents a place; habituĂ©: thedenizens of a local bar.
3.
British an alien admitted to residence and to certain rightsof citizenship in a country.
4.
anything adapted to a new place, condition, etc., as ananimal or plant not indigenous to a place but successfullynaturalized.

The rest of this post is going to be written over here. The blogspot has attacked my formatting. I'm not in the mood to look at the HTML to find out what happened. 

I live here. In the internet. Sometimes I leave. Have you left recently?

One page that I go to some of the time is ushistorytest.com. It's growing. Over 2k visitors this month. It's strange to watch the traffic that Google sends its way. I would like the owner to have more visitors. He does try hard to provide people with value. Unfortunately, that's not the easiest thing in the world. He wants to provide lots and lots of value this month. He contacted me. If me is something you can contact. 

You know. This used to be a pretty legit blog. Now it's the mad ramblings. The mad ramblings. You might enjoy them. You should enjoy them. Because you may as well enjoy life.

So why are there so many ramblings? I think that's a good question. It's because I want this post to be something like 500 words. That was my target when I sat down. The actual content is of very little relevance. I just want there to be lots of words.

So USHistoryTest.com is trying to build up its content base. Right now it's a little on the iffy side of awesome. The guides are legit. Don't get me wrong. I would follow them. I played a role in their creation, to be totally honest. It's just that it could give away lots of free useful content. That's what I want. If it gives away lots of free content you have this ego of mine to blame. It could disrupt all the internets. It could at least get several thousand visitors.

This post is looking more legit. And by legit I mean long. That's the important thing. It'd be hilarious if you found this thinking that you'd get some answer to some question about American History. That's just not gonna happen. 

The United States of Advanced Placement Tests. That's what this is. The History doesn't matter. The test matters. And it matters because no one wants to spend hundreds of dollars to take a US history course in college when you could do it for free in high school. It just makes way more sense. Don't waste your time in college studying history. Get it over with. Then forget all of it and repeat all of the mistakes of the past. 

Read this US History Timeline. Its 500+ people, events, inventions, court cases and themes will help you get a higher score on any US history test.



Monday 18 June 2012

Boston College and the US History Subject Test


There are a small number of select schools which require you do extra work to get in. The additional effort may seem intimidating at first, but getting into the school of your dreams is worth it. Boston College is one of these select institutions that require more from the student. SAT subject tests must be taken and provided for admission. Thankfully, the students may decide which of the many SAT tests they’ll take. The US history SAT subject test is often chosen because it is much easier to study for independently than physics or chemistry 

Would you like to know what you would need to score on the US History SAT Subject Test to get accepted at Boston College? Let’s look at the Boston College historical data to find out.

Over ten thousand more students apply to Boston College today than they did just a decade ago. Still, acceptance rates remain high in 2011 for a school that requires additional testing to be accepted. Acceptance rates at other competitive schools like Harvard have been dropping every year for 7 years. That Boston College has remained relatively open is promising. It may not be the pinnacle of American education, but it’s still a top fifty school. Getting enrolled takes some effort. There is no minimum SAT result for applicants submitting their SAT scores for consideration but the school does have general silent standards by which they abide. Boston College doesn’t publish their enrollee’s SAT subject test scores. Some investigation of the normal SAT scores must be done to get perspective on their needs.

Solid scores, not the nearly impossible ones needed for Princeton, are enough to get you in. Applicants who get accepted usually score in the top 12-16% of all SAT test-takers. Boston College will probably accept something lower than the the top 12% for their SAT Subject Test scores. Students who choose to take the SAT Subject Tests are a highly motivated group that is much different than the standard SAT test-taker. A substantial majority of these US history SAT students have taken AP US history. It’s a collection of people who are highly motivated to get into the very best of American schools. Have no fear if your score is lower than the top 12%. You can get accepted with something that is merely above average.

What score is Boston College likely to accept from an applicant?

Six Hundred-Sixty. That's enough to put you in the top 40% of all test-takers. It shows you have mastery of the topic. It's suggestive you're a good student.

What sort of score would cause you to really stand out from everyone else? The US History SAT Subject Test is the second most popular test after Math II. Many of the other people submitting to Boston College are going to have scores that could potentially match yours perfectly. Small quantitative differences can spell disaster and send you off to a safety school.

There are 16 different types of US history students.

1. The kind that falls asleep in class.
2. The kind that falls asleep in class but aces the exam because they already read the textbook.
3. The kind that loves history so much that they speak more than the teacher.
4. The kind that regrets taking the course because now they have more writing to do than an English class.
5. The kind who believes he's the correct contrarian.
6. The kind that argues in favor of the illuminati.
7. The kind that somehow made it into high school without knowing who Christopher Columbus is.
8. The kind who pass notes to lovers in the front of the class.
9. The kind who dream they lived in a bygone age.
10. The kind who are greatful to live in the present.
11. The kind who can't wait for their hover cars.
12. The kind that will forget what they've learned and doom themselves to repeating the mistakes of the past.
13. The kind who is inspired by the rebels, dreamers and thinkers who came before them.
14. The kind who hates the world for forcing him to learn about the past.
15. The kind who thinks they could've done better than their ancestors.
16. The kind who thinks they could have done better than their ancestors and are right.

Hey

Woah, This screen is all up in my face.