<p>Aaaaggghhh, 10 days (b/c today is basically over) until the scores come out and i'm sooo anxious. AAAAGHHH! (just needed to vent)</p>
<p>If you don't think about it, they will come much sooner...trust me.</p>
<p>Whether you think about it or not, they're coming June 26 at about 5-6 AM EST :)</p>
<p>^I thought it was 8 EST?</p>
<p>Anyway, just smoke a little bit of the ganja every day, and before you know it, it'll be June 26th.</p>
<p>lol. I know they're in by 10 am EST. :)</p>
<p>They say 8 EST on the website, but the scores are almost always up by 6 AM. For the May test, I checked at around 6:05 and they were up.</p>
<p>they were up at like a little after midnight EST for May, i stayed up with my friends to find out. (their scores, not mine)</p>
<p>chill. most of you know you're gonna have to retake it anyway. the more you think about it, the slower the score will come.</p>
<p>
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They say 8 EST on the website, but the scores are almost always up by 6 AM. For the May test, I checked at around 6:05 and they were up.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Really? I have like 5 days in between when I have to wake up at 7am for school and when I have to wake up at 7am for my internship, and if I use one of those days to wake up at 6am and my scores aren't up yet, guess who I'm coming after. . . .</p>
<p>Why don't you think about this for a second?</p>
<p>When you are sleeping, you aren't worrying and waiting for your SAT score. If we could quantify the time you've spent waiting/worrying about your SAT score prior to the morning it comes out (i.e. the night of the 25), it would be a certain number or value. On the morning of the 26th, regardless of your time of awakening, you will wake up, rush to your computer, turn it on, and rush to the CB website, and find out you got a 2040 and have to retake in October (actually, I would hope not). The time you spent worrying while conscious will be 2-5 minutes regardless of wakeup time as well. Thus the quantified time spent worrying/waiting for your SAT scores will be the same regardless of your wakeup time.</p>
<p>Basically, the five extra hours between 6 and 11 won't be five extra hours spent waiting. They will be five extra hours spent resting without a thought to your score. In a practical sense, you will not be getting your scores earlier with an earlier wakeup. It should be evident waking up early and denying yourself a good rest is pointless when there is no benefit conferred over waking up later.</p>
<p>"Why don't you think about this for a second?</p>
<p>When you are sleeping, you aren't worrying and waiting for your SAT score."</p>
<p>if you are really, really nervous you could worry about them in your dreams.. I did that once for a chem final: my teacher was awful, and i remembered about 10% of the formulas and I was going crazy cramming, and I actually had a dream about chemistry the night before my final...</p>
<p>^ lol. I agree w/ nukchebi0. They'll be there when you wake up...</p>
<p>hahah i'll be awake when they come out, because i'll be in Asia.</p>
<p>That was my first time taking the SAT. Having 2 more shots, I am still profusely anxious.</p>
<p>@ codered</p>
<p>haha, you know what I meant...</p>