<p>I’m taking the October one and I wanted to know the worst case scenario and the best case scenario depending on the curve to achieve at least 2200.</p>
<p>(Including the essay score)
How many wrong if curve is as steep as it can be?:
How many wrong if curve is not as steep?:</p>
<p>It also depends on how the number of questions wrong is distributed between the three sections. For example, if you want roughly 740 per section, you may be able to get about 2-3 wrong in math, 3-4 wrong with a 10 essay in writing, and 4 wrong in critical reading; or about 10 questions wrong total. However, you could get a 2200 with up to about 15 questions wrong if a plurality of them were in critical reading–e.g., 10 wrong in critical reading (~670), 3 wrong with a 10 essay in writing (~760), and 1-2 wrong in math (~770). You would need fewer questions to be wrong if most of them were in math, whose curve is not as forgiving as that of critical reading.</p>
<p>So, overall, to get a 2200, you’d need maybe around 8-15 or about 11 questions wrong on average. I had a 2240 with like 12 questions wrong but only because 10 of them were in critical reading.</p>
<p>2200 is about a 730 average between sections</p>
<p>Math -3
CR -7?
Writing -6 (12 essay)</p>
<p>so about -16</p>
<p>it depends on the curve though. I got -7 on CR and ended up with a 690.</p>