I’ve seen the CDS for 2014-2015 but that’s for the old SAT. I was wondering if anyone had data on the new SAT?
As far as I know, Harvard hasn’t started publishing stats yet with the NEW SAT, but you can use the conversion table to find out the equivalent 75th percentile score: https://collegereadiness.collegeboard.org/sat/scores/understanding-scores/sat-score-converter
FWIW: Yale Admissions is supplying both NEW and OLD SAT scores on their Class of 2021 Stats page: https://admissions.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/class_profile_2021_final.pdf
If it isn’t 1600, it’s close.
According to Naviance 1590… that’s like missing maybe 2 questions
@gibby is correct - Harvard has not published any data with the new SATs yet.
However I need to point out, once again, that Harvard does not quote (and will not quote) a 75th percentile for M+EBRW - they will quote 75th percentile for each. And although Naviance, Prepscholar, etc will make this common mistake, one cannot add the 2 sections together to get an accurate combined 75th percentile.
That said, with the new SATs, the 75th percentile for math is probably 800, and probably the same (or 790) for EBRW. But that’s my opinion.
College Navigator bases its stats on the common data set.
As @skieurope says, each half is 800 for Harvard: https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=harvard&s=all&id=166027#admsns
Which is still off the old SATs.
I would bet good money that is it 1600 or at the very least 1590.
@penn95 - I’ll take that bet. As @skieurope pointed out upthread, even if the 75% scores totaled 1590 or 1600, statistically it doesn’t follow that the combined 75% total will be the same.
Think about it; some 25% math kids will be 75% reading kids, and vice versa.
What’s interesting about Yale’s numbers is that a lower percentage of applicants scored in the 760-800 range on either section of the New SAT, especially EBRW, and that the profile does not include a middle 50 range.
I get the sense that fewer kids have been scoring 800 on EBRW than on the Old test’s Critical Reading.