Originally posted by: glen
what are the percentages?
Originally posted by: glen
For example:
Reading 570
Math 620
Writing 600
What sort of percentage range are they in?
Originally posted by: glen
I'm 36 years old.
I got a 720 math long long ago...
I am just asking about the new score, all of you are dumbasses for assuming they were my personal scores.
Originally posted by: anno
Originally posted by: glen
I'm 36 years old.
I got a 720 math long long ago...
I am just asking about the new score, all of you are dumbasses for assuming they were my personal scores.
heh.
I'm 49 years old.
I got a 670 on the math, a longer long time ago.
I was just trying to be helpful, and despite the namecalling and my inferior score, don't feel like a dumbass at all.
anno
Originally posted by: glen
I am not calling you a dumbass. Scroll up and look at the first couple of posters.
Those in the test-prep industry know that two groups of students call their SAT tutors on the day results are released: those who are thrilled with their scores and those who are devastated.
Paul Kanarek, who runs the Princeton Review?s California operations, said that those calls are usually split 50-50. But on Monday, the day scores were released for the SAT?s first use of its revised test, he said 90 percent of the calls were from happy test-takers ? very happy test takers.
?People are getting absurdly good test results, much better than we predicted, especially on the writing test,? Kanarek said. Typically, students increase by about 30 points between their last practice test and the actual test, but most students seem to be doing at least 100 points better, and many students are reporting 400 point increases from early practice tests to their actual scores, he said.
?We had long suspected that the first example of the new test would be reasonably easy and that scoring was going to be generous, and it looks like that?s what happened,? he added.
...
Originally posted by: cquark
While ETS won't release data on a single testing date, various test prep centers claim that the first implementation of the new SAT was graded extremely generously.
From http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/12/sat
Those in the test-prep industry know that two groups of students call their SAT tutors on the day results are released: those who are thrilled with their scores and those who are devastated.
Paul Kanarek, who runs the Princeton Review?s California operations, said that those calls are usually split 50-50. But on Monday, the day scores were released for the SAT?s first use of its revised test, he said 90 percent of the calls were from happy test-takers ? very happy test takers.
?People are getting absurdly good test results, much better than we predicted, especially on the writing test,? Kanarek said. Typically, students increase by about 30 points between their last practice test and the actual test, but most students seem to be doing at least 100 points better, and many students are reporting 400 point increases from early practice tests to their actual scores, he said.
?We had long suspected that the first example of the new test would be reasonably easy and that scoring was going to be generous, and it looks like that?s what happened,? he added.
...
Originally posted by: MaxFusion16
work harder, math is an easy 800
