<p>i got 57/60… which, when penalizing for wrong answers, is 56.25 - what does that translate to? the chart in that book (kaplan issee/ssat 2007) said anything above 55 is a 800 (perfect score) - which is automatically a 99% ??? and then i looked in another, older book (princeton review isee/ssat 2005 or 2006) and it had a percentile chart for all of the number of questions answered correctly and it said that 56.25/57 would be about 90-93%</p>
<p>Blairt–yes, I think that’s a 99th or 98th percentile. Well done!</p>
<p>I believe it was EUNIXD who missed 11 and omitted one question out of 60 on this years SSAT and he/she scored ~ 91%. You can verify this somewhere on this board. Suffice it to say, your score will be very high.</p>
<p>is it possible that this one test was… well, could i have just gotten lucky? does that really happen?</p>
<p>It is debatable, but yes, you can get a “lucky” one. Primarily that only happens with the verbal; reading and quantatative should stay the same, buy the particular words on a test can change your outcome. Simply take it again, and see what happens.l</p>
<p>What grade are you in? The grade you are in affects your score. Regardless, it is a high score. Congratulations!</p>
<p>grade 10, female. the chart that takes that into account says 90/91 (scaled score about 341 on old scaling) and the other says 800 (on new one), which is a perfect score i guess… (99% ?)</p>
<p>more accurate question: is this good enough for andover?</p>
<p>Yes, in terms of test scores. Doesn’t mean you’ll get in, but in short, yes, I believe that those are in the Andover range.</p>
<p>Those are great scores.</p>
<p>For me, Verbal was actually the one that usually never changed - 99-98 percent, but Math and Reading changed a lot for me (sometimes as high as 10 percent difference) but I got a good test. </p>
<p>When did/are you taking the SSAT?</p>
<p>i’m going to try to get a flex test date (not a nationally sheduled date)… or in january</p>
<p>I don’t understand the verbal section. One time you take it you know almost all the words and the next time, you barely know any.</p>