Dedication

<p>I just wanted to say, I am ridiculously impressed with anyone who gets a 2300+. I am quite impressed with any 2200’s as well. I have not studied a whole lot for the SAT. I put in an hour or two each week, studying words and strategies. I consider myself relatively smart, and I am pulling around a 2000 SAT score. </p>

<p>Now, if I studied intensely, I could maybe get a 2200. However, that would take a lot. My mind just isn’t built for standardized tests, I never do well on them. I also don’t like studying.</p>

<p>I am wondering, how many hours do you guys study a week, and what SAT scores did you get without studying? For me, it’s about a 1500. I know I am no idiot, I ace all my classes. </p>

<p>So I just hope everyone can be a little bit proud of themselves, anything 2200+ is top, top percentile. </p>

<p>I used to consider myself one of the “CC’ers”, but with my low test scores, I am no where near good enough to get into a top school; despite my perfect GPA and awesome extracurriculars.</p>

<p>So please, I ask you all to be a little bit proud of yourselves for getting high scores. I give you my congratulations and respect. Also, I am sure there are some people in the world who scored 2400’s, and maybe even went to Harvard, but are not happy with their life.</p>

<h2>Lastly, I hope everyone is successful, even someone who goes to somewhere like a community college. Dedication is hard to sustain, and it deserves rewards.</h2>

<p>Thank you for reading.</p>

<p>~2250-2300 with no prep, but I did have to practice to score in the higher end of the 2300s.</p>

<p>Are you proud of yourself? I mean, people throw their scores around like they’re nothing, but that’s top percentile. In real life do people congratulate you? A lot of people on this site act like no one is impressed by them.</p>

<p>Not really proud of myself, it’s more the product of a good educational system. And my high school is somewhat similar to CC in its obsession with numbers, just to a lesser degree, so no, people in my school are rarely congratulated with a 2200+ score.</p>