Always choose C

<p>I already went through the college selection process and already know what college im going to</p>

<p>but im just curious…</p>

<p>what would happen if u answer all C’s in the SAT. Like every quest, u answer C. (you still attempt grid ins and essay). What would your score probably be?</p>

<p>^I would say the same as if you just enter A, B, D or E, or just guess randomly: raw~0! I think it equates to about 230…</p>

<p>^Yes. The correct answers are consistent with randomness. On the math, this would mean about 11 correct, and a penalty of 44/4 = 11, for a raw score of 0. (I assume that you wouldn’t get any grid-ins correct by wild guessing.) A raw score of zero is generally in the 200-230 range. If you did this but tried the grid-ins and got all of them correct, you would have a raw score of 10, which scales roughly to 360-380.</p>

<p>If you guess randomly, you have 1/4 chances of getting an answer right. Every wrong answer is -1/4 of a point. So, it’d all work out to 0 or very, very close to 0 as a raw score.</p>

<p>When I took the Princeton Review course, they accidentally graded my practice test with the wrong form and I ended up with something around a 1400. Not really sure what this means…</p>

<p>That is…actually kinda funny!</p>

<p>I mean, mathematically speaking, there is a probability that if you guess different letters on every question (because I sincerely doubt they’d make an SAT that was all one letter) you COULD, in theory, get a 2400.</p>

<p>But of course, you have better chances winning the lottery.</p>