<p>When does the SAS come in the mail?</p>
<p>Got scores early from Naviance at my school! Will check out the official score report tomorrow to see what I did wrong. 2250 first try, 790 math, 730 critical reading, 730 writing, 10 essay. Who knows what happened with writing because on my PSAT I got perfect scores both years. One question wrong on math, I’m almost positive.</p>
<p>That’s a really great score for the first time! Congrats mmj! so lucky to get your score back early!!</p>
<p>Scores tomorow at 5 AM, SAS is ~1 month after tomorow.</p>
<p>Also got my scores, 800 CR 710 Math 750 W</p>
<p>@lepatron: how many writing do u think you missed? CR??</p>
<p>Nice math curve is good. Makes me feel better lmao</p>
<p>@runningforlife Missed two Writing MC questions and got a 9 essay I believe, and CR I went perfect last time (Jan), so could be perfect again or -1.</p>
<p>@lepatron did you put the one with or without had on the payphone???</p>
<p>@runningforlife Tough to remember, but I’m 80% certain I put “had revolutionized”, because the question (if I remember), said "by the time they went extinct, payphones (had revolutionized) communcation…)</p>
<p>No had</p>
<p>I’m a parent - my kid took this SAT. For some reason, you folks have got me wondering about this pay phone question. I’d really love to know the exact question so that I can take my own stab at it!</p>
<p>It was like “Pay phones are become obsolete due to cell phones, but they (revolutionized / had revolutionized) communication” obv not the exact question but similar enough</p>
<p>I guess I need to see the exact question, because little changes can make a huge difference. If it really said “pay phones are become obsolete,” then we’ve got bigger problems than whether “had” is correct. But seriously, was it “are becoming,” “have become,” or something else? Seeing the exact problem makes a world of difference.</p>
<p>it was “are becoming” i think</p>
<p>Something like: payphones, although having become obselete now, [had/revo or revo] when they were introduced.</p>
<p>So what’s the complete sentence?</p>
<p>@MisterK: something like "although payphones are becoming obsolete, they [had revolutionized/revolutionized] the phone industry when they first came into existence…</p>
<p>something along those lines</p>
<p>what I posted above is more or less it (the aspects of mine are correct in terms of tense, etc maybe not worded exactly the same but the the two past tense things happened at same time and first verb was present perfect)</p>
<p>When you guys get your score reports, will you have access to the exact questions?</p>