Calculate my math score please!

<p>What’s my score on the January SAT I math if I have:</p>

<p>1 omitted
1 wrong on grid-in (equivalent to an omit)
and 3 M/C incorrect?</p>

<p>I know it’s a raw score of ~48. Would it be a 700? or less?? Thanks for your help!</p>

<p>it cud be 700. its pretty similar to my Nov math score.</p>

<p>700 or late 600s ---- depending on the curve.</p>

<p>my tudor said that the total math section is out of 55, and a raw score of 48 is between a 700 and 730, depening on the curve. i have a chart from princeton review that shows the raw score equivalents. 21 = 500, 27 = 550, 34 = 600, 40 = 650, 46 = 700, 51 = 750, 55 = 800</p>

<p>derka derka derka :)</p>

<p>His raw score is 49.</p>

<p>-3 * 1.25 - 2 * 1 = -5.75 rounds to -6</p>

<p>55 - 6 = 49</p>

<p>Ironic.</p>

<p>^hahaha. It would be. The mistakes I make in math are almost always simple arithmetic errors, while I usually grasp higher-level concepts.</p>

<p>But actually, I am right because there are 54 math questions on the test according to the CB blue book, not 55. I have a question and answer service from a past test, and the score chart in my booklet confirms this. </p>

<p>So derka987, I think Princeton Review was wrong. Who’s your tudor? Henry VIII? I prefer Elizabeth myself…</p>

<p>According to the Official College BOard SAT Preperation Booklet for 2006-07, the curve is:</p>

<p>** Math:**[ul]
[<em>] 54- 800
[</em>] 53- 790
[<em>] 52- 760
[</em>] 51- 740
[<em>] 50- 720
[</em>] 49- 710
[<em>] 48- 700
[</em>] 47- 690
[<em>] 46- 680
[</em>] 45- 670
[<em>] 44- 660
[</em>] 43- 650
[/ul]</p>

<p>but the curve can be low or high, so it can differ from one test to another.</p>