-1 on SAT I Math in Nov = 770?

<p>-4 in june, 690!</p>

<p>my friend -3 in march, 740!</p>

<p>I love that 50 point difference.
aka NOT</p>

<p>1 wrong grid in nov sat = 780</p>

<p>what would a 750 be on the nov. test in terms for nos of qs wrong?</p>

<p>I don't see what the big deal is when it comes to seeing these large differences. Everyone here knows that the SAT is graded on a bell-curve. </p>

<p>They have no way of measuring or knowing the exact "difficulty" of any form of any test. If it was easier to get -3 on one form at one time than to get -1 on some different form, then your scores are going to show that.</p>

<p>The way I see it, for most of the people here, we should be hoping for harder versions of the test. Since most of us will get almost all the quesitons right anyways, having a harder test gives us some leeway.</p>

<p>But, **** happens, and if your test happens to be "easier", then you'd better not make any mistakes if you want your 800.</p>

<p>Am I ****ed off? Sure, my score in November was 690, from a 780... but it's my fault, not the collegeboards.</p>

<p>EDIT: If you are looking for a more legitimate reason to be ****ed at the collegeboard, consider being angry about the fact that they are insanely late in releasing writing/composite percentiles. Or, hate them for the fact that they overcharge us for APs/SAT/SAT2s.</p>

<p>this massive discrepancy between SAT IIs should be resolved with AP scores and school grades to back them up. And yes, I am damn ***<em>ed that Physics C's each part is f#$%</em> 82 bucks. what a bloody ripoff!</p>

<p>2 wrong, 1 omit- 730 (november)</p>

<p>I actually did 1 raw point better on my math in Nov. then i did in May and my score dropped 20 points. That I didn't really understand!</p>

<p>i think i got 4 wrong and 0 omit in october and that was a 700</p>