Sample questions for the new version of the college-entrance test were released Wednesday by the College Board, which announced last month that the new test will include real-world applications and require more analysis. Other changes to the SAT include making a computer-based version of the test an option, getting rid of the penalty for wrong answers, limiting the use of a calculator to select sections and returning to a 1,600-point scale. The College Board said obscure vocabulary words would be replaced with those more likely to be used in classrooms or on the job, and the math section will concentrate on areas that "matter most for college and career readiness and success." The SAT was once the predominant college admissions exam, but it has been overtaken in popularity by the ACT.