<p>Since scores are coming in a week or two, and since everyone on this site gets an 800, would anyone like to tell me if they think the math curve will be easy, medium or hard? Thanks every future scholar on CollegeConfidential. I never knew it was possible for everyone on this site to achieve a perfect score. Sorry. I am just venting.</p>
<p>There's probably going to be a good curve for Math. The math for June was definitely harder than usual.</p>
<p>mmm. We have no way to predict totally accurately, but I'd say this test had math sections that were harder than the March one's. So I expect the curve to be a little more generous. </p>
<p>In March, I got one wrong, and got a 770.
which is to say, a raw score of 53 out of 54 gave a 770. Not that generous a curve, no? But then, my friends and I thought the math section was very easy.
Curve was 800-770-740-etc, I think. At least in my region. </p>
<p>No such luck in June --I thought the math section was significantly more difficult. My friends agreed. Usually, the harder the test, the worse people do, the more generous the curve. I expect a more generous curve than the one in march because just about everyone I ran into agreed that the math sections were harder than in January or March.
The curve I'm hoping for: 800-790-770-750-etc. </p>
<p>Then again, I think your region matters, too. I know that SAT Subject tests are curved by state, not by nation. I'm not sure if the same applies for SAT1, but if it does, the curve would depend on how well your state does overall.
I live in Maryland among a bunch of overachievers and among some of the richest people in the US. (MoCo, anybody?) I hope the curve is still generous. :P</p>
<p>i think the curve is national. Otherwise, people on CC wouldn't have the same curve even though they're from different regions.</p>
<p>are subject tests really curved by states? i had no idea... i always thought it was a national thing. that's not exactly fair since it no longer is a national "standard" test. extreme example would be if you're not-intelligent and all the other people are not-intelligent from your state and you get like 10 right, which is above average, and still get a 750, another truly smart person from a truly smart state might get only 3 wrong and end up with a 750. i know this isn't the case and the example i gave is really extreme, but it still defeats the purpose of "standardized testing". i can't believe that it'd be a state curve.</p>
<p>as for the january math curve, 1 wrong was 790. so if june was harder than january (i dont remember, i thikn it was though since i know i got 2 wrong now and only 1 wrong then), hopefully they'll do 800-800-790 etc =D</p>
<p>meh. If the january was one wrong and 790, then the March curve was really harsh, no? Because I got one wrong and 770. :P</p>
<p>yeah holy bejeezus it was freaking hard.
does anyone know the answer for that one grid in with all the percentages?</p>
<p>percentage gridin was 2000</p>
<p>does any1 know the answer to the qs w/ a big semi circle and 1 small circle tangent to it and the arc length was 8.....it was asking for the radius of the big circle, which was the same as the diameter as the small circle. </p>
<p>ty</p>
<p>I put 2 btw :)</p>