<p>My D is a jr. and it was her first (and I guess one can always pray-last one!) I am curious how it compared to others. Thinking of you all today and wish you plenty of stamina!</p>
<p>Thank you! I wish her the best of luck in her pursuit of college!</p>
<p>If your first one is your last one, you ****ed up, unless you scored 2300+ there’s always room for improvement.</p>
<p>I don’t agree, I think we would be very happy and perhaps not test anymore if she got a 700 or above in CR and 750 in M and 750 in W. i think those are respectably good scores at most all achools. Do you think schools look down if you" settle " with a 2200?</p>
<p>^I sure as h*ll hope not, since that’s my superscore. For Ivies, anything above 2000 won’t necessarily keep you out. Anything 2300 is good and not worth re-taking. 2200 is about the average of what an accepted student has.</p>
<p>I sent my junior D off thinking that there were many more times that she can take the SAT (and the ACT) and that she should consider it a practice or an opportunity to do well (hopefully) on even one section. This did make her much less nervous–which is maybe half the battle.</p>
<p>(Secretly, though, I am hoping she will never have to take it again!)</p>
<p>Don’t be so hard on your kids. This is a note from all of us high schoolers. There’s already too much stress as it is (I’m a HS senior, so I know how it feels), and with the added pressures of the parents and lack of sleep, it’s driving us insane. We want to please you, to make you proud, but please don’t put so much pressure on us!</p>
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<p>Well maybe it wouldn’t be so bad if they increased the area on which they applied the force</p>
<p>gud 1 ^ broseph</p>
<p>hahahaha I actually laughed out loud</p>