<p>@SAT1410 I like your logic and optimism to defeat the awful “superior” people we go to school with. Lets be friends.</p>
<p>Haha yeah :)</p>
<p>The average sat score at my school is around a 1400 and maybe 3 people a year break 2000+ …we are a magnet school it’s sad…</p>
<p>Wait guys, I just wanted to ask a quick question. Is it true that if you major in psychology, it will ultimately just be deemed as a worthless degree and you end up making no $$$ or nah. </p>
<p>@LOLHELPME my friends sister has a psych degree and has yet to land a stable professional job in the field (a couple years) </p>
<p>People need to realize that SAT scores don’t determine intelligence. If anything, they determine experience and hard work throughout one’s life.
One who might seem inferior to others now still possesses great potential to match the intellect of those who were superior before. ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE
And don’t feel bad about what you get on the SAT this time, because it’s not the end of the world. Many of us do have more chances to retake this test. Even seniors.
Just wanted to throw this out there. :)</p>
<p>tell that to colleges my friend</p>
<p>Good words SAT1410
However, I would disagree with you on one point: the SAT has SOMETHING to do with one’s intelligence.</p>
<p>SAT scores test on how well you were raised academically in pre-school and elementary school if you really think about it. </p>
<p>I keep periodically refreshing the CB website just in case for some reason scores release early. </p>
<p>The SAT does have something to do with one’s intelligence. But that level of intelligence is innate among all of us. </p>
<p>And so the countdown begins. I need about three hours over here. </p>
<p>Anyways gotta finish this essay due by midnight and go to sleep! Good luck to you all! </p>
<p>The SAT doesn’t test intelligence or aptitude lol. Don’t kid yourselves. It’s whether you’re familiar with the test or not. Hardwork and determination can go a long way? How long? My friend went from a 1480 to a 2320 in just a mere 2 months. I’ll be brutally honest -he’s not at all smart lol. It’s how well you can play this "standardized " game. </p>
<p>And I would argue your ability to get really good at any “game” (if you so choose to call it that) is a form of intelligence in itself. </p>
<p>The world’s best League of Legends player has an element of intelligence that you don’t have, whether or not you’d like to admit it.</p>
<p>3 hours :(( </p>
<p>IM SO SCARED</p>
<p>Can’t sleeeepp</p>
<p>this is honestly ridiculous. The entire concept of taking an obviously flawed standardized test and using that to judge students. It doesn’t measure aptitude, intelligence, or how well-rounded a student is. It literally shows how great a student is at skirting the tricks and stunts the SAT tries to pull on you. You see other countries and their tests? That is the real deal- 8 straight weeks of testing on every possible subject in kenya, if you fail you either dont go to college or you repeat senior year. In China, one giant final at the end of the senior year. if you fail that, you’re done for life. in America you have this cliched, flawed test that some people have mastered and some haven’t, and yet its treated like such a big deal- for Ivys, the dream schools, its ideally 1 time, 2300+ and you’re done…but for other countries its soo much harder and intense but the schools are not comparable. idk.</p>
<p>Less than 3 hours now</p>