<p>I'm considering taking Korean SAT. But I fear it'll be difficult.. Anybody else korean here? 한국말 할수있는사람??? 제발 한국어 도와주세요.</p>
<p>안녕하새요, 무슨 도움이요? If you know Korean, that should be a easy 800.</p>
<p>Korean is my native language, but sometimes my mom and dad pick up what I say and say that it's wrong...</p>
<p>my advice is.. go do some of the practice korean sat questions on collegeboard, In my opinion, the test for native speakers should be easy as pie. Even if your grammar isn't 100% correct. I think the korean sat tests mostly whether you understand or not.</p>
<p>My 2 cents :)
I might take the korean sat too... maybe.</p>
<p>I have to say, the question was ridiculously easy, especially oral part, listening is very EASY although I will have to concentrate on listening. Grammar stuff was easy too, but Im still not sure about some stuff... I WOULD be glad to hear some of people who have taken the KOREAN SAT give feed backs..</p>
<p>i thought the listening section is super hard... because i wasn't able to understand the situation the speakers are in :P
But other than that, i think it wasn't that hard.
btw, i studied with 3 sat books (lol), and I'm a first generation korean immigrant!!!
and i still didn't get a full 800</p>
<p>but if you're korean.. won't colleges not like it if u send a krn sat2 score</p>
<p>would colleges notice korean applicants who came from korea and got an 800 on the test and koreans who were born in the US and still get like a 720?</p>
<p>But if you're a korean, they will barely even acknowledge it right??</p>
<p>Although I lived in Korea for 12 years, I took the Korean SATII just for the heck of it.. (I'm going to take 3 additional SATIIs anyway).
Of course, I got an 800. I think if you have no major problem communicating with your parents, you shouldn't have any problem. The usage part is really easy; I had time to check my answers 5 times. The listening part requires some concentration, so I'd suggest taking notes as you listen.</p>
<p>Also, someone I know took 3 SATIIs, including Korean. He applied to Harvard, which doesn't like people taking their native language SAT. However, he explained in a letter that he left Korea when he was 4 years old and that he had to actually learn it.</p>
<p>Good luck!</p>