SAT 1600

I received a perfect score on the SAT on March 9, 2019.

ACT 36

I received a perfect score on the ACT in December 2016.

SAT Subject Tests

I have perfect scores in SAT Chemistry, Math Level 2, and Physics.

Test Prep Tutoring

Click the picture above to read more from satisfied students and parents!

Letter from the CEO of ACT

If you get a perfect score, ACT's CEO sends you a letter!

February 1, 2018

From the Preposphere: February 1, 2018

SAT/ACT

The July ACT date is unavailable in New York and California. (ACT.org)

The most common mistake on SAT Reading is that students don't pay attention to context. (SuperTutorTV)

Don't overlook the ACT. (Erica Meltzer)

Have you wondered why Erica Meltzer's SAT and ACT books are written in such a traditional way? She believes strongly in her approach and suggests that private tutoring succeeds in applying it. (Erica Meltzer)

The College Board has recently published updated versions of its study guides for various SAT Subject Tests, including Math Level 2Math Level 1ChemistryBiologyPhysicsU.S. History, and World History.


COLLEGE

Which is more math intensive: economics or engineering? (College Confidential)

"The U.S. Justice Department has threatened to sue Harvard University to force it to turn over documents as it investigates whether the Ivy League school's admission policies violate civil rights laws by discriminating against Asian-American applicants." (US News)


CHEMISTRY

Chemistry: Here's an easy way to remember which atomic orbitals get filled first. (Socratic.org)


STUDY SKILLS

“The typical office worker is interrupted or switches tasks, on average, every three minutes and five seconds.... It takes an average of 23 minutes and 15 seconds to get back to the task.” (ThriveGlobal)

In tutoring, results are like a magnifying glass: effort and rewards are correlated. (Erica Meltzer)


MATH

Learn how to use parentheses on the TI-84 to avoid making small calculation mistakes. It's worth it.



FINANCE

Warren Buffett buys this with his billions... and it makes him happy. (CNBC)


COMPUTERS

Is Microsoft Paint pixelating your images when you try to scale them? Try the Pixlr online editor instead. (Pixlr)

Font Squirrel can analyze the font in an image you upload and offer you a list of similar, free fonts. (Font Squirrel)


AMERICAN HISTORY

Barbra Streisand's poignant post-WWII rendition of Happy Days are Here Again gives us a feeling of what it would have been like to have lived through two world wars and the Great Depression.



January 29, 2018

ACT July 2018 Test Date Not Available in California

As of this month, the ACT is no longer offering the July 2018 test date in New York or California:
With the new July test date this year, the ACT is now offered on seven national test dates each year. Unfortunately, ACT is unable to offer all test dates to students in New York and now California because their “Truth in Testing” laws would require us to release another test form each year beyond those that we already release, and that is cost-prohibitive for us.... 
California requires that a testing company release 50 percent of the tests it administers. The statute specifically requires that, if that number includes fractions of a test, the number be rounded up; so, administering six tests would require releasing three of them, but administering seven tests would require releasing four. ACT is forgoing its July test date in California so that we may comply with those requirements. 
Students who were planning to take the ACT this summer will have to schedule for the upcoming April, June, or September dates instead.

January 8, 2018

The Great Depression: A Diary (Benjamin Roth)

Here's the vocabulary list for The Great Depression: A Diary.

The Representative Quotes section is unusually long because this book is full of nuggets of wisdom written by someone in the midst of the Great Depression, not after the fact. I want to keep a record of what I learned for future reference.

I've preserved numerous spelling and grammar errors that appeared in the original diary (and, therefore, in the published work).

Knowing more about the Great Depression has helped me better appreciate elements of our popular culture like the songs Happy Days are Here Again (1929, pre-Depression, with Barbra Streisand's post-Depression, post-WWII performance in 1962) and Somewhere Over the Rainbow (1939).

Roth, Benjamin. The Great Depression: A Diary. PublicAffairs, 2009.

Representative Quotes

"In 1929 when the crash came all sorts of people were into the market on margins over their heads - doctors, lawyers, merchants, bootblacks, waitresses, etc. They bought stocks on tips, did not know what the company sold or made and did not know how to investigate a stock even if such a thought had occurred to them." (p. 6)

"June 5, 1931: The sheriff has been selling recently at public sale many vacant lots on which accumulated taxes amount to $500 or more. At these sales the lots are selling as low as $25 apiece clear of taxes. One of my clients bought ten of them ranging from $10 to $50. Of course they are mostly located in undesirable neighborhoods. Another client had 10 buildings razed because he could not collect rents and the taxes are exorbitant. This is a popular way to reduce taxes.... The constant supervision required by real estate, the costly upkeep, its illiquidity, the danger of a deficiency judgment - all have cooled me considerably." (p. 9)

"July 30, 1931: Magazines and newspapers are full of articles telling people to buy stocks, real estate etc. at bargain prices. They say that times are sure to get better and that many big fortunes have been built this way. The trouble is that nobody has any money." (p. xii)

"August 9, 1931: Professional men have been hit hard by the depression. This is particularly true of doctors and dentists. Their overhead is high and collections are impossible. One doctor smoothed a dollar bill out on his desk the other day and said that was all the money he had taken in for a week." (p. xii)

"October 10, 1931: Again and again I am forced to the conclusion that in prosperous times a man must be cautious and preserve his capital and be careful not to over-expand his business or to go too deeply into debt relying on a continuation of good business to pay the debt. In time of depression a man can be brave and if the depression is nearing an end he can invest his money or expand his business or open a new business with confidence that he is facing 5 or 10 years of prosperity. He can feel sure that the road will be up - not down. Many great and prosperous businesses were founded on the ruins of depression....
"A great many losses and failures in business and in investment are due to the reversal of this policy. At the height of prosperity they rush in to buy stocks or real estate or businesses and assume enormous indebtedness which can be liquidated only if the boom spiral mounts higher and higher. Then comes an abrupt end to prosperity - a crash - and down go these businesses and investments purchased at top prices. If the purchase was made mostly with borrowed capital as so often happens - then you can write finis to the chapter." (p. 28)

"April 6, 1936: I read an interesting thing today about Floyd Odlum and the building up of his Atlas Investment Trust. Started with $40,000 in 1924 - ran it up to a million in 1929. Sold out for cash and held on to cash until the bottom of depression was reached in 1932. With his cash he bought heavily in 'special situations.' Mostly in investment trusts hard up for cash. Stocks in these trusts were selling for less than 50% of their asset values. Since the assets were stocks quoted at depression levels - the buyer of such an investment trust bought the assets at 1/2 of depression values. He then held on and later liquidated at huge profits. He never took over the active management of a business but sold the stock to those who could run it. There were many such 'special situations' during the depression. He was actually buying stocks under the hammer. The same thing happened with railroads and other companies such as Continental Shares when they went into receivership. The person who had enough money to liquidate them could have had the assets for a song. Same principle as buying real estate at a foreclosure sold for price of the mortgage. Assets of the Atlas Corporation are now over $100,000,000 and they have literally become private bankers." (p. 171)

"April 28. 1936: For the last two weeks the stock market has been slowly sinking. Yesterday a bad break brought losses ranging as high as 10 points. It is funny how when the stock market is rising every piece of news is regarded optimistically and bad news is ignored. Now the reverse is true." (p. 171)

"August 24, 1936: It is an interesting sidelight on this depression that many companies which went into receivership during the depression are now being reorganized. In most cases the common stock was wiped out but bonds or preferred are good. In 1933-4 these preferred stocks could be bought for as low as 25 cents per share ($100 par) and are now worth as high as $14 (Continental shares). Here again a man with liquid capital and courage could have made a fortune on a comparatively small investment. Some who bought at low prices did not have the courage to hold on and sold at a nice profit of $4 or $5 per share. The real winnings went to those who held onto the receivership shares throughout the whole reorganization." (p. 176)

"January 2, 1937: "1932-1936 were bad depression years for the lawyer and even tho prosperity has returned for most people it has not yet returned for the lawyer. It will be a year or more before people will have enough money to buy real estate and do other things that require a lawyer. The lawyer who specialized in bankruptcies, receiverships and reorganizations reaped a harvest throughout the depression....
"Cash is king in every depression. A small investment in real estate or stocks or bonds in 1932 would be worth a fortune today.... Even though good stocks, bonds, and real estate were selling at giveaway prices but few men had both the cash and the courage to buy when things looked the blackest.
"When the final upturn came in 1935 it came very quietly and suddenly and kept going up.... the full effect cannot be appreciated unless you look back to see what progress was made in 1935-1936.
"During past depressions prominent bankers, business men, etc. were all wrong in most of their predictions. Use your own judgment and do your own thinking." (p. 194)

"March 11, 1937: President Roosevelt is still hell-bent for reform and his latest proposal is to pack the Supreme Court so it will hold constitutional his New Deal laws." (p. 197)

"October 12, 1937: During the past 2 years of general recovery, the law profession lagged behind. We are still badly in debt and have not yet had a chance to recover. It has been a long, hard pull." (p. 201)

June 24, 1938: Stock prices have continued straight up for more than a week now and many gains amount to 50% or more. Just as in 1932 the rise came after a lull of several weeks and a falling down in volume of sales - but no indication of improvement in business indices. It caught the economists flat-footed.
"Both 1932 and 1938 indicate there is no way to catch the bottom of the swing because it comes without warning. When liquidation has dried up and the situation looks hopeless - that is the turn. Your guess is as good as anybody's." (p. 213)

"July 20, 1938: In this depression at least the stock upturn came several weeks before business indexes showed any improvement. For the past two weeks these indexes have been turning slowly up. At the time of the stock market upsurge the indexes were very slowly moving down and some were stationary. Same with stocks. Volume was low and there were many indications of a sold-out market." (p. 214)

"March 10, 1939: Talked to W.W.Z. today. He said: During the past 10 years I lost half my life savings in local banks and corporations. The directors were personal friends and they advised my investments. I thought they were high-minded men and would look after the business. When the companies were broke I found out they had protected themselves and nobody else. If I had to do it over again I would invest only in outstanding national corporations with stocks listed on the N.Y. Exchange so I could sell when trouble threatened." (p. 216)

"October 16, 1940: From time to time people tell me of their experience in the stock market. For the most part they were within reach of large profits but did not take them. Dr. S.D. said: In 1929 I held $180,000 in stocks subject to a 40% margin. The crash caught me and I rushed in to sell but my broker strongly advised against it. Later I had to put up $10,000 additional margin. I finally sold out in 1930 and salvaged only the $10,000 margin. I put this $10,000 in the Home Savings Bank. It closed in 1931. In 1932 when the market was at low ebb I sold my pass book on the Home Savings for $4000 - and bought high grade stocks at 1/10 their real value. I determined to hold these until the market came back to normal. I did hold on until the first part of 1935 but then I needed money so badly I sold these stocks for about $10,000. Six months later these stocks shot sky high and I would have made an extra $50,000 if I had been able to hold on." (p. 235)

"July 9, 1941: As usual the law profession drags along in the vanguard and has reflected very little of the war boom." (p. 248)

"December 15, 1941: Stocks are selling today on a 20% earning basis. Even if taxes go higher they are a good buy for the long pull." (p. 251)

"December 31, 1941: This is the craziest business year I have ever been through. We are at war, steel mills have been humming, wages are high and everybody working - yet my law practice was worse in 1941 than in 1940. Because of war, high taxes, threat of inflation, government restrictions, etc. etc. business men are afraid to expand, buy real estate or do anything constructive and there is very little for the lawyer except an occasional divorce case or other domestic business.... Some businesses do record business and others go broke. It is all a matter of luck. Auto dealers sold a record number of cars in 1940 and now there are no tires to sell. Tires have been rationed - so dealers in new tires are out of business while second-hand dealers and re-treaders are busy. There may be a few people who are making money but I do not know who. This is truly a 'profitless' prosperity and it takes a strong heart to remain in business." (p. 252)

SAT Vocabulary Words

Racketeer: a person who engages in dishonest and fraudulent business dealings.
"Youngstown's steel industry was booming again, and racketeers were getting rich on illegal gambling." (p. x)

Receivership: the state of being dealt with by an official receiver.
Receiver: a person or company appointed by a court to manage the financial affairs of a business or person that has gone bankrupt.
"Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had to be taken into receivership [in 2008]." (p. xii)

Kitty-cornered (cater-cornered): situated diagonally opposite someone or something.
"Visit the nicely appointed library or historical society at Youngstown (they are partically kitty-corner across Wick Avenue from one another)" (p. xx)

Palimpset: a manuscript or piece of writing material on which the original writing has been effaced to make room for later writing but of which traces remain.
"As if constructing a kind of economic palimpset, Roth would occasionally go back and annotate his earlier entries and did not hesitate to prove himself wrong." (p. xxi)

Rouge: a red powder or cream used as a cosmetic for coloring the cheeks or lips.
"in the latter stages of the [1922-1929] delerium [women] wore their stockings rolled and their bare knees rogued" (p. 4)

Scalper: a person who resells shares or tickets at a large or quick profit.
Par: the face value of a stock or other security, as distinct from its market value.
"The scalper then sold these bonds on the market at par and with the money scalped some more bonds." (p. 6)

Pot: a toilet.
"June 28, 1962: The U--- family bought half of East Federal St. at sheriff sales in the 1930s. However down-town real estate has gone to pot because of the growth of suburban shopping centers. The U--- family still owns half of E. Federal St. but the buildings are empty and cannot sell." (p. 13)

Rabid: having or proceeding from an extreme or fanatical support of or belief in something.
"He was particularly rabid against his investments in real estate." (p. 17)

Stogy: a long, thin, inexpensive cigar.
"2 for 5 stogies are again in popular favor" (p. 20)

Vicious: (of language or a line of reasoning) imperfect; defective.
"This scarcity of money is what makes people think if more money were printed business would be better. This is a false and vicious theory." (p. 24)

Millinery: women's hats.
"millinery store" (p. 25)

Fraternity: a group of people sharing a common profession or interests.
"The whole banking fraternity is in public disfavor" (p. 26)

Bated: in great suspense; very anxiously or excitedly.
"with bated breath we asked 'What next?' " (p. 32)

Ways and means: the methods and resources at someone's disposal for achieving something.
"a meeting... to consider ways and means.... the choir has been fired and other economies affected but this does not seem enough" (p. 41)

Go to the wall: (of a business) fail; go out of business.
"Many old businesses are going to the wall" (p. 44)

Dub: give an unofficial name or nickname to (someone or something).
"dubbed themselves the Bonus Expeditionary Force" (p. 51)

Extraction: the ethnic origin of someone's family.
"of German extraction" (p. 56)

Plead: present and argue for (a position), especially in court or in another public context.
"pleading 'state rights' on the Prohibition question" (p. 63)

Shantytown: a deprived area on the outskirts of a town consisting of large numbers of crude dwellings.
"burned down the shantytown where some 15,000 veterans had camped" (p. 65)

Semi-annual: occurring twice a year; half-yearly.
"unfavorable semi-annual reports" (p. 66)

Thrall: the state of being in someone's power or having great power over someone.
"nearly one-third of the value of farms was in thrall, mainly to banks and insurance" (p. 79)

Magnate: a wealthy and influential person, especially in business.
"car magnate Henry Ford" (p. 90)

Indict: formally accuse of or charge with a serious crime.
"Indictment of bankers and investigations are the order of the day." (p. 104)

Terrific: of great size, amount, or intensity.
"Everything depends on the President. It is a terrific responsibility." (p. 108)

Brain trust: a group of experts appointed to advise a government or politician.
"Pres. Roosevelt's advisers are a group of college professors called 'the brain trust.' " (p. 116)

Piece work: work paid for according to the amount produced.
"the girls claim they work long hours on piece work" (p. 116)

High finance: financial transactions involving large amounts of money.
"A great deal of rotten-ness in high finance has been discovered." (p. 119)

Come to a head: reach a crisis.
"I believe the issue of more direct inflation will come to a head soon. In the meantime my law practice remains stagnant while commodity prices go up at a dizzying pace." (p. 131)

Tory: an American colonist who supported the British side during the American Revolution.
"The U.S. Chamber of Commerce takes a public stand against President Roosevelt's gold policy and demands a return to sound money and the gold standard. The President strikes back by calling them a bunch of 'tories.' Remembering that George Washington would not accept Continental currency in his business dealings I do not quite see the parallel implied by the use of the term." (p. 140)

Ejectment: the action or process of evicting a tenant from property.
"Radical socialism seems rapant in every class of society but mostly ministers and college professors. This has spread to the working class. They no longer ask for favors but 'demand' government work, cancellation of mortgages, reduction of debts, etc. They feel the courts will not permit foreclosure of mortgages or ejectments, etc." (p. 156)

Demagogue: a political leader who seeks support by appealing to popular desires and prejudices rather than by using rational argument.
Panacea: a solution or remedy for all difficulties or diseases.
"the voice of the demagog began to be heard throughout the land. Socialism, Communism, more equitable distribution of wealth, new currency and other panaceas became ordinary table talk." (p. 159)

Avarice: extreme greed for wealth or material gain.
"avaricious and not satisfied with a fair investment return" (p. 179)

Scurrilous: making or spreading scandalous claims about someone with the intention of damaging their reputation.
"scurrilous anti-Semitic literature" (p. 182)

Pump-priming: the stimulation of economic activity by investment.
"March 1, 1938: After 8 years of pump-priming and other trick methods of bringing back prosperity, it is my conclusion that none of them are any good. In our capitalistic system we must let the forces of competition and demand and supply work things out in a natural way. No man or group of men is smart enough to control prices or supply and demand or currency in a nation so large as ours." (p. 210)

Cash and carry: a system of wholesale trading whereby goods are paid for in full at the time of purchase and taken away by the purchaser.
Embargo: an official ban on trade or other commercial activity with a particular country.
" 'cash and carry' embargo" (p. 223)

Ebb: (of an emotion or quality) gradually lessen or reduce.
"morality and religion have been at a low ebb" (p. 225)

Bait: torment (a trapped or restrained animal), especially by allowing dogs to attack it.
"Wilkie [FDR's opponent in the Presidential election] promises to hold on to the social gains but to put a stop to the baiting of big business; to the trend toward government ownership and national socialism." (p. 236)

Firm: (of a price) rise slightly to reach a level considered secure.
"a firming of money rates" (p. 240)

Harden: (of prices of stocks, commodities, etc.) rise and remain steady at a higher level.
"interest rates will not harden in the next 6 months" (p. 243)

December 16, 2017

How to Avoid Small Calculation Mistakes in Chemistry and Physics

One of the best ways to avoid small mistakes is to include units when you plug your numbers in and to carry those units all the way through without skipping any steps.

Take a look at the problem below for an example. Here, we're given the kinetic energy and mass of an object and need to solve for its velocity:




I wrote all of the units into the solution, didn't skip any steps, and plugged my answer (including the units) back into the original equation to make sure the answer was right. I converted joules into simpler units (kg * m2 / s2) in order to make the units canceled and caught a potential mistake where I might have forgotten to convert grams to kilograms.

If you do this consistently, most of your small mistakes should go away on their own. Showing your work takes discipline, but it's a lot better than having to solve problems over and over again on homework, or, worse, get them wrong on tests without realizing it.

Chemistry problems in upper-division college classes involve calculus and statistics and are much harder than the one I just solved. Ironically, as a problem gets harder, it's more important to show every step of the solution, as a single mistake causes you to have to do the entire problem over again.

If you want me to write up a solution for a problem you're working on right now, please contact me. I'd be happy to do one for you for free!

November 30, 2017

Free Session: Statistics on the SAT

Data analysis!
As you may already know, the revised SAT tests the Common Core concepts of mean, median, mode, and standard deviation.

In their daily work, practitioners in the physical, life, and social sciences use statistics more than trigonometry and calculus. Finance professionals and marketers will tell you the same thing.

If you do some research about the field you plan to work in, you're likely to see a focus on statistics. The "new" content on the SAT isn't just there to satisfy Common Core requirements: it could help you in very practical ways.

If you write a paragraph about how statistics could be used in your potential future career, I'll give you your first 90-minute tutoring session for free.

Please contact me about tutoring and include the aforementioned paragraph.

This offer expires on November 30, 2017.

November 26, 2017

SAT Vocabulary: The Undoing Project (Michael Lewis)

Here's a partial vocabulary list for The Undoing Project. Enjoy!

Lewis, Michael. The Undoing Project. W.W. Norton, 2016.

SAT Vocabulary Words

Ape: imitate the behavior or manner of (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.
"In 2004, after aping Oakland's approach to baseball decision making, the Boston Red Sox won their first World Series in nearly a century." (p. 16)

Sui generis: unique.
"Trump seemed sui generis" (p. 16)

Chit: a short official note, memorandum, or voucher, typically recording a sum owed.
"used the draft pick as the biggest chit in a deal to land a superstar, James Harden" (p. 44)

Vagary: an unexpected and inexplicable change in a situation or in someone's behavior.
"vagaries of human judgment" (p. 45)

Fiendish: extremely awkward or complex.
"fiendishly complicated alarm clock" (p. 45)

Putative: generally considered or reputed to be.
"It was curious, when you thoguht about it, that such a putatively competitive market as a market for highly paid athletes could be so inefficient in the first place." (p. 51)
"If these putative experts could be misled about the value of their predictions, who would not be misled?" (p. 80)

Sweep: a comprehensive search or survey of a place or area.
Makeshift: serving as a temporary substitute; sufficient for the time being.
"after he'd been taken away in a big seep in November 1941... he was jailed in the makeshift prison in Drancey" (p. 53)

Chattel: (in general use) a personal possession; an item of property other than real estate.
"freet o travel to Paris to see what remained of their home and chattels" (p. 58)

Minaret: a tall slender tower, typically part of a mosque, with a balcony from which a muezzin calls Muslims to prayer.
"The minaret on the beach beside what is now the Intercontinental Hotel became an Arab sniper nest." (p. 63)

Preposterous: contrary to reason or common sense; utterly absurd or ridiculous.
Danny was younger, and dressed in a jacket and tie, which struck the other students as preposterous." (p. 67)

Platoon: a subdivision of a company of soldiers, usually forming a tactical unit that is commanded by a lieutenant and divided into several sections.
"Danny's platoon was meant to circle around the village and ambush any Arab forces." (p. 74)

Rebuff: reject (someone or something) in an abrupt or ungracious manner.
"who tried to lead and was rebuffed" (p. 77)

Halo effect: the tendency for an impression created in one area to influence opinion in another area.
"Danny knew of the halo effect.... [the interviewers] had been spending twenty minutes with each new recruit and from the encounter offering a general impression of the recruit's character." (p. 79)

Neurotic: abnormally sensitive, obsessive, or tense and anxious.
"psychoanalysts who tried to predict what would become of their neurotic patients fared poorly compared to simple algorithms" (p. 80)

Fog: something that obscures and confuses a situation or someone's thought processes.
Strafe: attack repeatedly with bombs or machine-gun fire from low-flying aircraft.
"In the fog of battle, he was strafed not just by Egyptian but also Isaeli warplanes." (p. 86)

Force: a person or thing regarded as exerting power or influence.
Operator: a person who acts in a specified, especially a manipulative, way.
"His mother, Genia Tversky, was a social force and political operator who became a mebmer of the first Israeli Parliament, and the next four after that." (p. 88)

Morose: sullen and ill-tempered.
Kibbutz: a communal settlement in Israel, typically a farm.
"She'd turned up one day, morosely, in their high school class. After her father's death she'd lived on a kibbutz, which she loathed" (p. 90)

Disquisition: a long or elaborate essay or discussion on a particular subject.
"a disquisition on the differences between Americans and Israelis" (p. 95)

Quotidian: ordinary or everyday, especially when mundane.
"He minimized quotidian tasks he thought a waste of time - he could be found in the middle of the day, having just woken up, driving himself to work while shaving and brushing his teeth in the rearview mirror." (p. 96)

Preternatural: beyond what is normal or natural.
"a preternatural gift for doing only precisely what he wanted to do" (p. 97)

Abnegation: the act of renouncing or rejecting something.
"abnegation of social responsibility" (p. 98)

Insouciance: casual lack of concern; indifference.
"His classmate Amia Lieblich witnessed Amos's insouciance after he'd been assigned by a professor to administer an intelligence test to a five-year-old child. 'The night before the work was due, Amos turned to Amnon and said, "Amnon, lie down on the couch. I am going to ask you some questions. Pretend you are five years old." And he got away with it!' " (p. 101)

Uzi: a type of submachine gun of Israeli design.
"Barabary was struck by how casually her new husband tossed his Uzi on the bed before taking a shower." (p. 120)

Ostensibly: apparently or purportedly, but perhaps not actually.
"the minds ability to defend itself from what it ostensibly did not want to perceive" (p. 131)

November 18, 2017

SAT Vocabulary: Flash Boys (Michael Lewis)

Here are the vocabulary definitions for Flash Boys. Happy studying!

Lewis, Michael. Flash Boys. W.W. Norton, 2014.

SAT Vocabulary Words

Sensibility: a person's delicate sensitivity that makes them readily offended or shocked.
"scored a direct hit on Canadian sensibilities" (p. 28)

Staid: sedate, respectable, and unadventurous.
"The RBC Christmas party had always been a staid affair." (p. 28)

Behest: a person's orders or command.
Cronyism: the appointment of friends and associates to positions of authority, without proper regard to their qualifications.
"At the behest of the SEC, in turn responding to public protests about cronyism, the exchanges themselves, in 2005, went from being utilities owned by their members to public corporations run for profit." (p. 35)

Extemporaneous: spoken or done without preparation.
"'I'll just wing it....' this first extemporaneous presentation" (p. 77)

Glad-hand: (especially of a politician) greet or welcome warmly or with the appearance of warmth.
"It's always seemed to me that the things you need to do to influence change had to do with glad-handing. It just felt so phony." (p. 88)

Pernicious: having a harmful effect, especially in a gradual or subtle way.
Predation: the action of attacking or plundering.
"Reg NMS was intended to create equality of opportunity in the U.S. stock market. Instead it institutionalized a more pernicious inequality. A small class of insiders with the resources to create speed were not allowed to preview the market and trade on what they had seen." (p. 98)
"It wasn't high-frequency trading in itself that was pernicious; it was its predations." (p. 173)

Whence: from what place or source.
Midst: in the middle of.
"From whence came the regulation that made brokers feel comfortable not answering their phones in the midst of the 1987 crash?" (p. 100)
"jolted it back from whence it had come" (p. 195)

Loss leader: a product sold at a loss to attract customers.
"like bait in a trap - a loss leader... the goal was to spend as little as possible to acquire the necessary information - to make those initial trades, the bait, as small as possible." (p. 112)

Dutifully: in a conscientious or obedient manner.
"Gates was dutifully shocked: 'When I first saw the results of these tests, I thought: This is obviously not right. As far as he could tell, no one seemed much to care that 35,000 small investors could be so exposed to predation inside Wall Street's most prominent bank.' " (p. 116)

Schmuck: a foolish or contemptible person.
"I'm amazed that people don't ask the questions.... that they don't dig deeper. If some schmuck in West Chester, PA can figure it out, I've got to believe other people did, too." (p. 117)

Canvass: question (someone) in order to ascertain their opinion on something.
"Brad flew to Canada and sold his bosses on the idea of an RBC-led stock exchange. Then, in the fall of 2011, he canvassed a handful of the word's biggest money managers... and some of its most influential hedge fund managers..... They all had the same reaction." (p. 119)

Kingpin: a person or thing that is essential to the success of an organization or operation.
"There were maybe twenty-five guys I called kingpins - the people who actually knew what was going on." (p. 121)

Larceny: theft of personal property.
"It was riskless, larcenous, and legal - made so by Reg NMS. The way Brad described it, it was as if only one gambler were permitted to know the scores of last week's NFL games, with no one else aware of his knowledge. He places bets in the casino on every game and waits for other gamblers to take the other side of those bets." (p. 124)

On-board: go through procedures to effectively integrate (a new employee) into an organization or familiarize (a new customer or client) with one's products or services.
"managed on-boarding of all high-frequency clients to Crossfinder" (p. 125)

(Aid and) abet: encourage or assist (someone) to do something wrong, in particular, to commit a crime or other offense.
Infamous: well known for some bad quality or deed.
Rig: manage or conduct (something) fraudulently so as to produce a result or situation that is advantageous to a particular person.
"By mid-2007 Goldman's bond trading department was aiding and abetting a global financial crisis, most infamously by helping the Greek government rig its books and disguise its debt, and by designing subprime mortgages to fail, so that they might make money by betting against them." (p. 134)

Dissemble: conceal one's true motives, feelings, or beliefs.
Obfuscate: render obscure, unclear, or unintelligible.
"People on Wall Street were simply paid too much to lie and dissemble and obfuscate, and so every trusting feeling in the financial markets simply had to be followed by trailing doubt." (p. 156)

Glitch: a sudden, usually temporary malfunction or irregularity of equipment.
Queer: spoil or ruin (an agreement, event, or situation).
Systemic: relating to a system, especially as opposed to a particular part.
Quirk: a peculiar behavioral habit.
Exploit: make full use of and derive benefit from (a resource).
"The glitches at BATS and Nasdaq that queered the market for the benefit of HFT [high-frequency trading] weren't flukes but symptoms of a systemic problem... many other little market quirks there that were potentially being exploited" (p. 185)

Epithet: an adjective or descriptive phrase expressing a quality characteristic of the person or thing mentioned; an epithet as a term of abuse.
"Irish epithet" (p. 191)

Fractious: (of a group or organization) difficult to control; unruly.
Tranquil: free from disturbance; calm.
Coherent: united as or forming a whole.
Political: relating to, affecting, or acting according to the interests of status or authority within an organization rather than matters of principle.
"The car remained fractious and unsettled. The car holding his other friends was tranquil." (p. 195)
"It was a mistake to think of a bank as a coherent entity. They were fractious, and intensely political." (p. 234)

Biff: strike (someone) roughly or sharply, usually with the fist.
Ill-defined: not having a clear description or limits; vague.
"He'd been biffed from an ill-defined career path onto a nother, clearer one." (p. 197)

Ape: imitate the behavior or manner of (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.
"the many foreign stock markets, bond markets, options markets, and currency markets that had aped the U.S. stock market's structure" (p. 201)

Quixotic: exceedingly idealistic; unrealistic and impractical.
"a possibly quixotic attempt to fix a financial system that had become deeply screwed up" (p. 208)

Rebuff: reject (someone or something) in an abrupt or ungracious manner.
Overture: an approach or proposal made to someone with the aim of opening negotiations or establishing a relationship.
"Before IEX launched, Brad had rebuffed an overture from Intercontinental Exchange (known as ICE), the new owners of the New York Stock Exchange, to buy IEX for hundreds of millions of dollars - and walked away from the chance to get rick quick." (p. 213)

Arbiter: a person whose views or actions have great influence over trends in social behavior.
"The more the big banks sensed that Brad was being regarded by big investors as an arbiter of Wall Street behavior, the more carefully they confronted him." (p. 214)

Troll: walk; stroll.
"John Schwall had found him while trolling on LinkedIn and asked him to come for an interview." (p. 221)

Heuristic: proceeding to a solution by trial and error or by rules that are only loosely defined; a heuristic process or method.
Mumbo jumbo: language or ritual causing or intended to cause confusion or bewilderment.
"We have heuristic data ******** and other mumbo jumbo to determine our routing." (p. 232)

Distinct possibility: with a high probability
"the distinct possibility that investors in the stock market were about to wake up to what was being done to them, and to go to war against the people that were doing it" (p. 235)

Rich: (of a color, sound, smell, etc.) pleasantly deep or strong.
"Our system of justice is a poor tool for digging out a rich truth." (p. 246)

Weedy: (of a person) thin and physically weak in appearance.
"this monstrous feast was now being served to a collection of weedy technologists" (p. 247)

Double jeopardy: a procedural defence that prevents an accused person from being tried again on the same (or similar) charges and on the same facts, following a valid acquittal or conviction.
"To avoid double jeopardy, the Manhattan DA's office had found new crimes with which to charge Sarge for the same actions." (p. 258)

Jeopardy: danger arising from being on trial for a criminal offense.
Cross: oppose or stand in the way of (someone).
Incidentally: in an incidental manner; as a chance occurrence.
Circumstantial: (of evidence or a legal case) pointing indirectly toward someone's guilt but not conclusively proving it.
Pick: criticize someone in a petty way.
Vivid: producing powerful feelings or strong, clear images in the mind.
"Just like on the street, there is life in prison, and random people get there based on the jeopardy of the system. The prisons are filled by people who crossed the law, as well as by those who were incidentally and circumstantially picked and crushed by somebody else's agenda. On the other hand, as a vivid benefit, you become very much independent of material property and learn to appreciate very simple pleasures in life such as the sunlight and morning breeze." (p. 259)

Motley: incongruously varied in appearance or character; disparate.
Queue: a line or sequence of people or vehicles awaiting their turn to be attended to or to proceed.
"motley queues of bikes, cars, pickup trucks, Amish horse-drawn carts, and farm equipment" (p. 262)

Festoon: adorn (a place) with ribbons, garlands, or other decorations.
"The tower was 180 feet high, with no ladder, and festooned with electrical equipment." (p. 270)