<p>Haha, I’m definitely not rich, and I scored particularly high. It’s all a matter of opinion.</p>
<p>@SAT 2350: haha i can’t believe you copied-and-pasted this question for all “top” colleges. You’re definitely a high school student and you cannot come to college any sooner =)</p>
<p>LOL he thinks Cal is a “top” college with a 2350…</p>
<p>well it’s at “CC Top Universities” category…whatever makes 'im happy.</p>
<p>Okay okay, we’ve all had our fun. Let this thread die. Kid’s had enough.</p>
<p>similarly, I come from an affluent family, but did not do any sat prep, and still scored well.</p>
<p>The correlation between income and SAT score might still exist, but the idea that rich kids -always- compensate with SAT prep is very ill-contrived.</p>
<p>wait…whats the 14 joke? Class starts on Tuesday</p>
<p>he 14 and he goes to Cal, DUH. do u need a dunce hat???</p>
<p>Haha loving these arguments. If only I was rich then I would have gotten a way higher SAT score. Thank god I wasn’t poorer though otherwise I would have gotten a way lower SAT score.</p>
<p>Correlation not causation homies.</p>
<p>yawn… anyways, i wonder why rich kids have so much of a greater chance to get into prestigious colleges than poor kids.</p>
<p>IQ and wealth have been shown to be loosely correlated. Absolutely not perfectly correlated, though.</p>
<p>I didn’t grow up wealthy but one can’t deny this is the case.</p>
<p>I came from an affluent family, but I turned down SAT prep based on principle. It just felt like a waste of time.</p>
<p>So, anyways, I got a relatively poor SAT score (by CC standards). But, it was good enough to get me in at one of my first choices. After marticulating, my score went down in the deep bowels of history and never resurfaced.</p>
<p>Am I ever so glad that I didn’t do SAT prep. ;)</p>