<p>So I went on this site:</p>
<p><a href=“http://kaplan.testive.com/w/launchpad/”>http://kaplan.testive.com/w/launchpad/</a></p>
<p>And I rushed through all three parts, and came out with 2320/2400 on what I would likely get on the real SAT.</p>
<p>However, the catch is the computer “adapts” to your answers, so if you get multiple answers right in a row, the next questions will be set to become harder and harder.</p>
<p>Anybody else try this out and report their opinions on this?</p>
<p>And it only takes 1.5 hours supposedly, which seems to be another great bonus.</p>
<p>The best way to really predict your score is to do multiple practice tests (from the blue SAT book of course) in as close to the real SAT parameters as you can handle. From that you’l see a range of probably around 70-80 points, which, to be honest, is variation you should expect/be willing to handle depending on the test you get. </p>
<p>@HalfWaterHalfAir</p>
<p>I know, and I’ve gotten a 2240 and a 2300 on 2 fully timed practice tests before the actual SAT on June.
However I’m scared I’ll get a lesser score I aimed for, like a 2100, so I used the Kaplan “Turbo Test” to “predict” a score I might come close to on the recent SAT I took. On that note, I also want other people to take it and have their opinion on it.</p>
<p>@HalfWaterHalfAir</p>
<p>Also, in your experience, do the “SAT google docs” (the google docs SAT takers make to discuss answers) provide a good estimate of how much you got wrong in each section?</p>