<p>Does anyone know what a new sat score would be equivalent to on the old 1600 scale? A chart would be greatly appreciated.</p>
<p>It has not been determined yet. As to the writing section and as to a composite including all three sections, the college board has not yet issued a percentile ranking for a test and does not intend to do so until it has a few tests over with; likely time for releasing such percentile rankings is October 2005.</p>
<p>1800=1200 2250=1500
1875=1250 2325=1550
1950=1300 2400=1600 gooooooood luck i got 1840..........that
2025=1350 sux
2100=1400
2175=1450</p>
<p>Keep in mind that some colleges do not plan to take the W score into account until after the next school year, when they have a better idea about what it means.</p>
<p>Presumably, though, if one has scored an 800 on W, colleges probably will be suitably impressed.</p>
<p>If you just want a general thing, take the score you got (eg a 2100) and divide it by 2400. Then take that number and multiply it by 1600.</p>
<p>So for the 2100
2100/2400=.875
.875*1600=1400</p>
<p>Voila.</p>
<p>Take your score out of 2400 and subtract your writing score. For some reason, the CB made the new and the old Writing tests incomparable when it comes to scores, so its not even possible to compare SAT II Writing scores with SAT I: Writing section scores (the SAT II Writing had a much nicer curve)</p>