<p>What do guys think the curve for each will be?</p>
<p>Also with Cr 8 wrong 2 skipped, Math 3 wrong and 3 skipped, and Writing 4 wrong will I get over a 2100?</p>
<p>What do guys think the curve for each will be?</p>
<p>Also with Cr 8 wrong 2 skipped, Math 3 wrong and 3 skipped, and Writing 4 wrong will I get over a 2100?</p>
<p>Uhh yeah you do have a shot, the CR is gonna be lenient, w/ 8 wrong, 2 omitted you may be looking t high 600s, math maybe low 700s, writing 720+ depending on your essay</p>
<p>How do you the CR will be lenient? BTW, there is no chance 8 wrong 2 omitted gets in the 700’s. Mid-600’s would be the most accurate prediction.</p>
<p>3 wrong 3 blank will get u 660-680</p>
<p>I really hope the reading will be lenient… cz they seemed really hard… and the passages were really ambiguous :/</p>
<p>Ugh, CR was extremely hard. I am only 50/50 sure on one of the Math problems, so hopefully that either means an 800 or something almost as high. CR I would be very happy if I hit 700, but that’s probably not going to happen. Rarely have I ever seen sequences of questions that require you to get the first one right in order to get the second one right. Writing, well, my essay probably wasn’t as good as my 10 essay in January, but the grammar went really well, and I think I might have only gotten 0-2 wrong. So, my hopes are 650+ CR, 770+ Math, and 730+ Writing.</p>
<p>Yeah…I’m hoping the curve is lenient too. What are you guys aiming for? What number Sat is it for you?</p>
<p>Do people really think the curve will be lenient? Everything was pretty easy with the exception of a few questions. I had to omit like 13 on math, because I did a poor job on time management. I imagine I’ll get some of the grid-ins wrong and maybe a few of the MC I answer. I omitted one on CR, none on writing. I’ll probably only get a few wrong on both hopefully. I’m wanting a 2000, but who knows. How exactly does the curve work? I understand what a learning curve is, but I’m not sure how it affects the SAT scores.</p>
<p>Just to make sure, you know that the curve is more formally known as the raw score conversion, right (I’m pretty sure you do, just not entirely certain). The curve is different for each test because tests usually have different levels of difficulty. This is done so that a score on one test, such as a 760, is equal to the same score on another test.</p>
<p>The reading sections seemed distinctly more difficult for me than most of the other sections. Reading is the only part where I remember formally getting a question wrong, and the count is already about -6. Is there any hope for breaking 700?</p>
<p>Reading seems really hard this time… but math was a bit easier for me… I hope the writing curve is neutral or lenient… just not hard :D</p>
<p>Reading will be slightly lenient, math and writing normal</p>
<p>Reading will def be lenient, considering that 5 wrong and 1 omit on the Jan SAT was still a 710 (not a 660 - 680). I’m guessing that 3 - 4 wrong will still be a 750+. Writing this time, in comparison to Jan, was harder as well, so I’m guessing that -1 will be a 790, -2 a 770, -3 a 760, -4 a 750, -5 730 -6 720/710. Math was slightly tricky this time, so I think that -1 will be a 790, -2 a 770, and so on. </p>
<p>How much is do you think -4 on Math is? Chance at breaking 700???</p>
<p>my daughter says that she omitted one in Math and the rest she is confident and CR omitted two and three qns wrong - writing she is very good and so she should have almost nailed it
can you please predict the scores for Math and CR?</p>
<p>I predict that I will get a 2000</p>