Based on SAT question discussion, say you count that you got 5 wrong, how many can you accuratley pr

<p>Based on what people are providing about answers to questions, if you count that you got 5 wrong, should it be safe to predict that you got 15 wrong and just add 10 more wrong?</p>

<p>15 wrong is a lot of mistakes - I would add 5 instead of 10.</p>

<p>The short answer is that you can’t accurately say how many you missed until you get your scores Oct 24.</p>

<p>But given that people on CC are discussing the most difficult problems–and you only missed 5 that you know of–I doubt you missed 10 other easy questions. In other words, I agree with the previous poster.</p>

<p>I am clinging on to the hope that even though I know I definitely got 2 wrong for CR, and didn’t understand the MLK passages, that those 2 were the only ones I got wrong. I know, it is most definitely a false hope, but what can you do?</p>

<p>guys, any other input?</p>

<p>Okay, I haven’t taken the SAT yet or anything, but I think you could predict the number you got wrong by looking at a practice test were you thought you got five questions wrong. Since you have the scores of your practice tests, you could find a correlation between the number you think are wrong to the number that are wrong. Of course, you would have to be able to remember how many you thought were wrong on that practice test, which may be difficult.</p>

<p>This approach has more merit because it compares your perceived errors to your actual errors, rather than arbitrarily assuming that you made a certain number of mistakes beyond those that you have identified.</p>

<p>Just a thought…</p>