<p>232 here in TX</p>
<p>72 Reading
80 Math
80 Writing </p>
<p>Now for the SAT… </p>
<p>232 here in TX</p>
<p>72 Reading
80 Math
80 Writing </p>
<p>Now for the SAT… </p>
<p>gah 2360 on the sat but a 221 in maryland, idk if ill make it</p>
<p>lol that’s the opposite of me. I messed up the sat (2280) but did well on psat 236. I would prefer my scores flip, but whatever</p>
<p>Are we sure that we will not get in trouble for doing this? Especially if we haven’t received our score reports from school yet?</p>
<p>How do we do the calculations when we have omitted some. Do we just subtract the total of questions from the number we omitted? </p>
<p>Got the score I wanted!</p>
<p>Congratulations to all of those who achieved an honorable score!</p>
<p>matchboxlife:</p>
<p>when i score my practice tests, i just take -1.25 off for every question wrong and -1 for each omit, then subtract the total from the max # of points</p>
<p>then once you get your raw score, round up a .5 and .75 and round down a .25</p>
<p>for example, 3 wrong and one omit in critical reading would be:</p>
<p>-3.75 and -1</p>
<p>= -4.75</p>
<p>48 - 4.75 = 43.25; rounds down</p>
<p>43 raw score.</p>
<p>They round up always. So 41.25 rounds up to 42. It says so in the Kaplan book.</p>
<p>As a Texas resident and junior, I’d say the cutoff would be around 216.</p>
<p>Did everyone get their schools from school or college board?</p>
<p>Ignore that^
I’m dumb. I figured it out. Never mind. </p>
<p>Still waiting for palm to explain his magic voodoo powers lmao</p>
<p>@Gestalt
You sure? For the kids last year it was a 218…</p>
<p>The averages are about 1 raw point lower total nationally, so that’s about 2 - 3 points. Just a hunch.</p>
<p>Thanks! @Chalmydia </p>
<p>@balrog29 Are you sure?</p>
<p>Can anybody confirm if you round down or up if you have a ().25? For example, would 43.25 raw score be 43 or 44?</p>
<p>My school hasn’t mentioned the PSAT score distribution and I have anxiety because I need at least a 185 to get into an SAT class that guarantees you a 2100 or above or your money back lol</p>
<p>@Newdle </p>
<p>Unless the Kaplan book and my PSAT teacher are both wrong. I’m like 99.99% sure that they will always round up.</p>
<p>I got a 185 last year - if I used this year’s curve, I would’ve made a 181 on it (I rounded down .25s)</p>
<p>I still haven’t received my scores yet, but do you guys think the school would put it up on Naviance before they gave it to us?</p>
<p>@balrog29 According to the Princeton SAT/PSAT book I have, it says “Multiply the number of incorrect answers by .25 and subtract this result from the number of correct answers. Then round this to the nearest whole number.”</p>
<p>@Newdle </p>
<p>My Gruber’s book says round to nearest number. Very strange. Gruber’s are always messed up tho. McGraw Hill does not mention whether we are supposed to round up. So one book says round up another says nearest number. I trust my teacher tho, u can believe what u want. It may indeed round down tho.</p>