<p>The page temporarily unavailable thing means no incorrect questions? I don’t see why that would exist - wouldn’t it just show all the questions saying ‘you got this question correct’? </p>
<p>I’m fairly certain this is not the case (though how I wish it was :P) because I know I got at least 1 question wrong - on the writing section - and that section also displays the ‘currently unavailable message’.</p>
<p>If I’m misinterpreting which question this is a reply to, let me know. </p>
<p>Can anyone post the curve? I got my raw score from palm’s method but don’t know how to convert it to scaled? The CB understanding your scores link is broken. </p>
<p>I think you have to have your past PSAT’s registered with your collegeboard account already to use this method. How else are they gonna know that person is you only by looking at your collegeboard account and the name on your PSAT answer sheet? Like, I am probably not the only one with my name among people who took the test this year.
Not sure about you getting perfect if it shows you error: I’m leaning more towards that they can’t identify who you are.
Correct me please if I am wrong.</p>
<p>That’s what I am trying to get a clear answer on…for those of you able to calculate the score, if you have a page without errors, did the page say “temporarily unavailable” or did it say something else?</p>
<p>I have to laugh, because my daughter was in the small minority who had her October SAT scores held up (for a month!) so naturally she is also part of the group who can’t use the hack She had 2012 and 2013 PSAT scores, so that’s not the issue. :-)</p>
<p>She had a 2350 PSAT, with all points off on her essay, so a 240 is not out of the realm of possibility, but looks like we will wait to see (darn it! Impatient! lol)</p>
<p>I don’t understand why our cutoff scores vary so much? My state’s cutoff last year was 206. Does this mean that our education system is that terrible? haha</p>
<p>I have no idea which questions I got wrong or right; I know I got a few wrong on the CR section, but I’m not sure about any others. Thankfully I’m a sophomore… </p>
<p>I live in Cali, so the cutoff is pretty high–222 or something. Hopefully next year I’ll do well (actually, I feel like it might be lower next year because of the new PSAT and how a lot of people won’t be able to prepare for it as well).</p>
<p>Those of you calculating your scores, are you just taking the # of questions you got incorrect and subtracting that # from the total number of questions in that corresponding section. Like 2 questions wrong on CR, means -2 and a raw 46 which according to the chart, becomes a 77?</p>
<p>Aren’t you supposed to take # of correct–disregarding omitted Qs–and subtract (0.25 * # of incorrect Qs) to get raw value then get scaled score? Like on CR, 9 wrong, 1 omit, 38 correct. You would do 38-(9 * 0.25) which equals 35.75. To be rounded up to 36, and according to chart, that’s a 61.</p>
<p>Can someone confirm or deny this as the correct method.</p>
<p>222 in MA. yes or not for cutoff? anybody have a MASSACHUSETTS score report with a score below or equal to 222 saying whether that score qualifies?</p>
<p>When posting score please indicate if this is a real score or estimated based on a hack. This will help, since we do not know if the hacking method was validated yet.</p>