<p>Hi guys, </p>
<p>If I obtained a 2220 in seventh grade (I'm currently a sophomore), how much do you think my score will naturally rise, without practice, if I take it junior year (by virtue of being older and having learned more, etc. etc.)</p>
<p>Hi guys, </p>
<p>If I obtained a 2220 in seventh grade (I'm currently a sophomore), how much do you think my score will naturally rise, without practice, if I take it junior year (by virtue of being older and having learned more, etc. etc.)</p>
<p>probably to low 2300s is my guess. Why don’t you do a practice test sometime this year (at home or a library) and see what you get?</p>
<p>bump</p>
<p>To be honest, you could even hit 2400. You’d likely go somewhere 2300+ easily. Take a practice test and go over what you don’t understand. You shouldn’t have too much to review. If I were you, I’d aim for a perfect score. </p>
<p>Whoa. 2220 as a 7th grader? That’s higher than I’ve scored as a junior </p>
<p>Like the above posts, you are most likely gonna get a 2300+ with little or no prep. I would shoot for high 2300s or even a perfect score if I were you.</p>
<p>@supercilious Your score is indeed very good for a 7th grader. However, I don’t believe the SAT is something that will naturally increase by much at this point. You, like many students across the nation, clearly possess the intelligence/knowledge to do well, but the SAT is a test where things could go wrong very easily. If you are aiming for the high 2300s/2400 I recommend that you spend some time practicing and finding some tricks that work for you when approaching the questions.</p>
<p>i think it would improve. I didn’t get a 2220 as a 7th grader (lol not that smart), but i got a still high score of 1960 as a 7th grader and then when i took a practice test in the middle of 10th grade got low 2200s and high 2200s by the time i started prepping for psat/SAT (ended up with 232 psat and 2360 SAT). I think you can def go for a 2400. </p>
<p>2220 is insanely good as a 7th grader . as of now i would think you would be in the 2350-2400 range </p>
<p>How about you just take it and let us know? A question here or there can bring that forecasted 2300+ down to the same range you had before. But obviously that’s not a bad score at all. </p>
<p>You scored 500 points higher than me when I took it as a junior, props… </p>
<p>Are you REALLY that curious as to how much higher your score might reach or are you trawling for compliments? Humblebrag???</p>
<p>Assuming this isn’t a ■■■■■, you’ll likely fluctuate between 2250 and 2400, as that’s the typical range that people who are good at the SAT score. That difference within that range is just stupid mistakes that there’s really no way to avoid (though practice minimizes this). You have the potential for a 2400, but don’t count on it as it is largely “luck.” Regardless, any score that you get will be in the range where colleges don’t really care about score differences so you should be fine. </p>
<p>@matt846 no I’m not a ■■■■■; thanks for the input. @T26E4; perhaps there is some element of egotism in my post, but I genuinely do want to know. </p>
<p>It doesn’t matter. The test is changing. That 2200 means NADA.</p>
<p>I disagree^^–that 2200 is a great jumping board. The test may change, but the OP’s intelligence can adapt.</p>
<p>so smart… </p>
<p>@fauve It still means nothing. What about the kids who are smarter who don’t rush to take the exam? What about the kids who spend thousands of dollars on tutors and take 40 practice tests and take the real exam once and get a 2400? Are they any smarter? It means nothing. The OP is asking how much he or she can improve their score and by the time they take the exam, it won’t even be out of 2400 and it will test different skills.</p>