I think the best way to predict scores is the following:
Calculate the percentage of questions you answered correctly. For example, if you missed two math questions, do 36/38.
With that decimal, multiply by the number of questions that were supposed to be on the test. For example, now do 0.9473 x 54 = 51. 51 is your “raw score.” Now go to Panda SAT Calculator, type in the correct amounts, and that will probably be somewhere around your score.
Others have suggested PSAT curves. Quite valid.
Correct me if I am wrong, but College Board’s error primarily affects those students scoring in the high 600s and 700s…?
Has anyone called and successfully waved the fee for the October SAT? if so, how did you complain to them? I’m about to call the office and it’d really help me out. Thanks!
I actually called today and it was pretty easy to request a fee waived test. You just say that u want one and they ask for ur information such as DOB, Name, School, Email… then afterwards they send u a confirmation email to print ur ticket… the call lasted 8 minutes but most of it was them repeating stuff like what to bring, what time to get there stuff of that nature. @juniorneedshelp
Hey guys, so this was my first SAT, and I know that the scores come out Thursday, but what time should I be expecting them? Morning, afternoon, evening, or just anytime during the day? Just wondering so I’m not sitting by a computer all day :))
@Em1509 scores come out at 3 in the morning. I stayed up till 3 to see my scores and bombed my chem test the next day haha. Sometimes, family connection/naviance has the scores up a few day earlier.
For the absolute value question, where the answer was 0, where were you suppose to bubble in the 0? It is always the left-most box right? Because the first left-most box didn’t have a 0 option ._.
@BenzeneRings@bringit1
If you just wrote a 0 in the left most box without bubbling anything, you’ll get the question wrong. What you write in the boxes doesn’t matter, the machine only grades the bubbles.