<p>Has anyone else’s score prediction got waaaaay blown off course?</p>
<p>I went in the testing room expecting to score a 31-33 since I hit 34-35’s
on the practice tests but I got the report this morning saying I made a
cumulative score of 27. The English and math sections are my strongest suits
but apparently I scored a 25 on the English. </p>
<p>I was so sure I destroyed those sections enough to hit a 34+ on each.
Should I send this to be hand-scored? I find it hard to believe I got a 25 on the English.</p>
<p>My deadlines are Jan 3, Jan 10, and Jan 15 and I have a feeling it won’t return in time since it takes 3-5 weeks but I’m feeling REALLY uneasy on this 27 since my GPA is not top notch.
Should I rush for the January SAT?</p>
<p>SAT Eng is NOT easy… since u didn’t get the score u wanted on this one am just trying to tell u SAT won’t be any walk in the park either… It’s not easier to ace i mean… But u sure can do it! now u might wanna take a prac test and see how you do… then judge for yourself… BUt don’t distract urself too much tho… try and c wat u’ll take so u can hit those prac tests… and ace it!
Good luck!</p>
<p>I was expecting a 30 and got a 28, sigh sent it in already. If you already have subject tests, you can write the SATs. I’m writing two subject tests in Jan…to give them more ground to mark me on I guess. I hate the SATs, no WAY am I writing that again! Good Luck, where are you applying?</p>
<p>Whoa… I feel EXACTLY the same about my ACT English score! After I left the testing room, I was almost 100% confident I scored a 32+ in English. When I checked my scores, I found out that I got a 26… :(</p>
<p>I’m also considering score verification. I don’t understand how I did so bad, especially since I was scoring in the 31-34 range on Red Book + Princeton Review practice tests…</p>
<p>The SAT is a different ballpark of question types and writing style. I’m guessing you’re a senior? If you are, I’m pretty sure December is your deadline to take these tests sorry to say…</p>
<p>Lol nope, 31. I hate standardized testing.
Can’t say the SAT is any different. Both are a measure of how well you test and how much prep you can afford, not intelligence.</p>