How often does 2400/2400/36 happen?

<p>Does anyone have any statistic, or estimate, of how often people attain that perfect test record-</p>

<p>2400 SAT, 2400 SAT IIs, 36 composite ACT?</p>

<p>That would be pretty cool...</p>

<p>(I have 2 so far..reaching for the SAT)</p>

<p>care police.</p>

<p>Who knows? Who cares?</p>

<p>Anyone who would take the SAT after getting a 36 or the ACT after getting a 2400 needs to get a life.</p>

<p><a href="http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/sat_percentile_ranks_2008_composite_cr_m_w.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/sat_percentile_ranks_2008_composite_cr_m_w.pdf&lt;/a> </p>

<p><a href="http://www.act.org/news/data/08/pdf/two.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.act.org/news/data/08/pdf/two.pdf&lt;/a> </p>

<p>P.S. One high school in Minnesota about four years ago had THREE girls who all had scores of 1600 on the old two-section SAT and scores of 36 on the ACT. Sometimes high scores are clustered in the same place.</p>

<p>good luck. 2400 SAT is the hardest</p>

<p>Not necessarily. I think the SAT's a lot easier than the ACT...which is why I never took the ACT. </p>

<p>It depends on how you think.</p>

<p>i know someone who got both 2400 and 36 and 800 on 3 sat 2's....100% serious..and i wanna kill them for taking both sat and act even after perfect score</p>

<p>Whatever, heh. It's impressive, but at the same time, rather silly.</p>

<p>Hahaha....</p>

<p>I admit it is rather silly...and it is largely for pride.</p>

<p>I took the ACT once, the SAT II's once, and the SAT once.</p>

<p>ACT and SAT II's were good days, SAT not a good day.</p>

<p>I figured if I retook it I could hit the magic number.</p>

<p>I promise I'm not crazy..haha</p>

<p>I would rather go for the world record for most 2400's. maybe 3 or 4 perfect scores would get me into Guinness?;)</p>

<p>Dr. Michael Fikar's scored about 50 perfect SAT's (on 1600 and 2400 scale combined). You have a long way to go for that record, ChoklitRain.</p>

<p>^^ He couldn't possibly have taken all those tests under standardized conditions at the age of typical test-takers, so this is a somewhat bogus claim. Lots of college-educated adults would score much better on the SAT in their early twenties than they did when applying to college with less life experience and less reading practice.</p>

<p>I agree with tokenadult. Sophistry.</p>

<p>Arachnotron is a prevaricator. lol SAT words :3</p>

<p>I should make clear that I'm commenting more on what Michael Fikar claims about himself than about the participant in this thread who related that claim.</p>

<p>Why would anyone take the ACT AND SAT? I have 2400/2400, but I feel absolutely no need to add another 36...what a waste of time. If they have that much time, they need to fill up their schedules!</p>

<p>Apparently there's a SAT prep guy around West LA that takes the SAT regularly and gets 2400 pretty frequently. But if you're a professional SAT taker, you should be getting 2400 quite often. That's probably what Fikar does.</p>

<p>Well, yeah. Obviously, if you're an adult, 2400 isn't that impressive. I'm just saying, if you want the "world record", be prepared to take a lot of damned tests :)</p>

<p>The guy has a Ph.D, so he's clearly had a LOT of time to "destroy" this college entrance test :P</p>

<p>I wouldn't be surprised if its quite often. I mean, if someone is smart enough to get a 2400 on the SAT's, then it would make perfect sense that they perform well on another test that tests the same things (math, english, reading).</p>