<p>Yes, it looks like All-ivy has been dishonest with us.</p>
<p>Well, I started out with a 1750, and at the time I was around 2000. Now I’m at about 2150.</p>
<p>^You LIED to us.</p>
<p>Haha.</p>
<p>Have you no shame. Stop lying to us. You only improved by like 20 points I bet.
And was that “2150” (cough) an official test? Or were you taking a practice test with the answer key in front of you like you always do? Take an official test and screenshot the score on collegeboard.com and then some of us might belive you. But right now, we all know you are BSing us.</p>
<p>You’re right. This is total bull. Thanks for the help though.</p>
<p>Pathetic in every sense of the word.</p>
<p>Are you kidding me? Of course I’m serious, you jackasses.</p>
<p>So you are serious about it being complete bull. I knew it. And just because my teachers call me a jackass does not mean that you can.</p>
<p>Hey, be grateful- At least your teachers speak to you…</p>
<p>They don’t really speak to me per se. Its usually yelling at me because I have my back turned to them and am usually busy messing around.</p>
<p>But hey, at least they notice me. Some people are beneath a teacher’s attention.</p>
<p>Woah ivy, you said a bad word! Ivy league schools wouldn’t like that.</p>
<p>this is not intelligent.</p>
<p>^Yes it is immature, but so is expecting to get a 2400 on the SAT.</p>
<p>And then being dishonest about practice test scores is also immature.</p>
<p>This thread…is still alive?</p>
<p>lol is this the panda killing thread? LOL</p>
<p>Yessir it is. Pandas are not- at least not for long.</p>
<p>1750 to a 2400?</p>
<p>Really, let’s be realistic. Has ANYONE here heard of someone who started out with a 1750 SAT score and gone on to an Ivy school? Without the benefit of sports and what not? And what about people starting out at 1750 and going to a 2400? I’m asking this not as a rhetorical question, but as a serious one. Anyone?</p>
<p>We like to say that nothing is impossible. But then again, there are things that are only 0.001% possible.</p>
<p>^ lolz, agreed.
No matter how hard I train, I will never swim as fast as Michael Phelps, nor run as fast as Usain Bolt. Not if I practice 5 hours a day for 10 years. Not ever.</p>
<p>Similarly, some people just can’t make the cut academically. Expensive SAT prep classes may turn a 1750 into a 1900 or maaaaaaaaaaybe a 2000, but there’s still a significant gap/lack of natural intelligence that money can’t buy.</p>
<p>^ I think that you are right about the PHYSICAL limitations of most human beings. Since we all have different bodies, although we can train for a long time, we will most likely never accomplish the feats that michael and Usain have accomplished. </p>
<p>HOWEVER, I feel that achieving a 2400 is certainly not a limitation. Most of us have working minds that are all capable of performing the same thoughts. Who is to say that someone who studies english grammar for a year, learns 2000 new words, and reads pre-1900 novels cannot achieve a 2400. It is just my personal opinion that everyone can do the impossible with their minds. It is just a matter of dedication and motivation.</p>