<p>Your SAT score can’t be an 1865.</p>
<p>^You don’t have an 1865 and it has nothing to do with your or anyone else’s abilities. It’s because SAT scores only go by increments of 10, so your score is impossible, sorry but that’s just a fact.</p>
<p>Note, my above response was to a post by the OP which they have since deleted.</p>
<p>I’m curious. What did the comment say? :D</p>
<p>OP: the reason so many people keep pointing out your grammar is that it is bad enough to be truly distracting for the reader, I don’t want to be harsh, and I think that others were trying to let you know this more gently, but you didn’t seem to be getting it. </p>
<p>Professors do care about grammar; that is one of their jobs. Just FYI, it most likely won’t be professors who are reading your admissions essay. The admissions committees who will be reading your essay will be looking for:
- a sense of who you are as a person (as opposed to a list of what has happened to you)
- your readiness for college (grammar would be an indicator of this)
- your general likability, humility, willingness to grow and learn from others (this forum is a good place to practice that)</p>
<p>Good luck to you. I hope it all works out.</p>
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<p>This is rubbish.</p>
<p>I am quite sure that the only people who say this are the people who can’t be bothered to make their writing correct.</p>
<p>But I appreciate the irony of your using the non-standard anyways in your erroneous assertion!</p>