<p>As Nom said, the guy got a math question wrong. It was one of the fill-in-the-answer ones and he was like writing his names in numbers (as in A=1 and B=2, etc.), and accidentally got the right answer to one of them. Darn luck! The elusive 400 still remains >8)</p>
<p>Taking the SAT to get every answer <em>wrong</em>... amazing! Didn't it mess up the guy's score report though?</p>
<p>The guy already had his PhD.</p>
<p>I dont think he much cared about his score report since the last time it mattered was long before they changed the grading scale.</p>
<p>oh man i could understand the guy wanting to get a 0 cuz that would help us but for the rest of the people actually trying to get a good score....thats GHEY</p>
<p>yeah...for statistical reasons</p>
<p>Whoa.. I thought scholarship people let you use your old scores.. Man, it would suck to go back to taking standarized exams.. *faints</p>
<p>yea im glad that stuff is over</p>
<p>Cant u just leave the whole test blank and get a 400?</p>
<p>Certainly, but why not strive to get every question wrong for an even lower score?</p>
<p>the SAT counts you off for 1/4 of a point for every wrong answer in the multiple choice section so in order to get double 200's (not to mention that a blank SAT is considered a request to cancel scores)</p>
<p>And 400 is the lowest possible scaled score.</p>
<p>Yeah, I was absent minded. Sorry.</p>