Cracking the GED, 2001 Edition
The Princeton Review doesn’t try to teach you everything there is to know about math, English, or analytic thinking — only the techniques you’ll need to score higher on the GED.iThere’s a big difference./iInbCracking the GED,/bThe Princeton Review will teach you how to think like the test makers.brbrThis is accomplished by teaching you how to:brEliminate answer choices that look right but are planted to fool youbrWork backward from the answer choices to solve writing skills problemsbrCrack the social studies and science sections without memorizing hundreds of factsbrTackle the math sections by “backsolving” your way to the right answersbrbr*This book includes 2 full-length, simulated GED exams with questions that are just like the ones you’ll see on the actual GED.brbriContents include:/ibrbrbI Orientation/bbrGetting StartedbrTaking the GEDbrGuessing and POEbrCrazy GraphicsbrCrazy ReadingbrbII How to Crack the Writing Skills Multiple-Choice Test/bbrSentence StructurebrUsagebrMechanicsbrbIII How to Crack the Writing Skills Essay Test/bbrThe TemplatebrConstructing Your Own TemplatebrbIV How to Crack the Social Studies Test/bbrSocial Studies Part OnebrSocial Studies Part TwobrbV How to Crack the Science Test/bbrBiological SciencebrPhysical SciencebrbVI How to Crack the Literature and Arts Test/bbrFiction and DramabrNonfiction and PoetrybrbVII How to Crack the Math Test/bbrBasic ArithmeticbrApplied ArithmeticbrAlgebrabrGeometrybrbVIII Answer Key to Drills/bbrbIX Practice Tests/bAfter attending Dartmouth and columbia,bGeoff Martz/bjoined The Princeton Review in 1986. He led the team that designed The Princeton Review GMAT program, now taught in over 50 cities around the country. He is the author or coauthor ofbCracking the GMAT,/bbCracking the ACT,/bbPaying for College/bandbHow to Survive Without Your Pare@Â?(õà¾Ûâ¬