<p>800! Congrats to errybody!</p>
<p>DS got a 710 on the Math II. He’s in Honors Pre-Calc, and the only other classmate who took a math subject test took Math I. He noted that he forgot box & whiskers, it’s been 3 or 4 years since he did that.</p>
<p>He was happy with it as he was doing sample exams in that range; anything above a 700 is good, and unless you are targetting below Ivies, 800s don’t help. His PSAT math was 71, coincidentally.</p>
<p>Haha, congrats BurnOut!</p>
<p>hooray!! I also got an 800 i think i omitted 1 and missed 4. </p>
<p>congrats guys, we’ve conquered this test!!</p>
<p>@ tangowited
You can try Princeton Review books as they are quite helpful.Difficulty level of questions is almost the same as original test.A few days before tests you can practice tests from Official study guide it has got 2 previously administered Math level 2 test.You can practice tests from Barron’s again but this time try to solve most of the questions without using graphical calculator.Graphical calculator is very helpful in solving Barron’s Math level 2 test(many questions can be solved without writing anything on paper) but in the college board tests there are only 2-3 questions that really require you to use graphical calculator in rest of the question you only need to use a simple scientific calculator.By not using graphical calculator will be relying more on your algebraic skills which will get better an will help you save time on test day.On test day you can surely use your graphical calculator (it really helped me in the question in which we had to make a box plot) I hope this will help you prepare better for the test.</p>
<p>Easy 8 </p>
<p>10 char</p>
<p>800! </p>
<p>I was not expecting that at all! I thought I did pretty poorly on the test, especially considering I wasn’t even able to finish.</p>
<p>I got an 800 with little to no preparation. Be warned–EVERY free online practice test I found was much, much harder than the actual exam. As far as I know, I got one wrong and omitted zero while on some free exam I got 3 wrong and omitted 8.</p>
<p>is it worth it to retake a 770? I was surprised cuz I omitted 6. mustve only missed one more or something</p>
<p>Not unless you’re applying to like a top 10 business/engineering/math intensive program.</p>
<p>I got 800 with little preparation. I checked what topics they cover on the exam, and I reviewed what I had forgotten. I probably spent 3 hours at most studying. I never even took a full practice test. Honestly, if you paid attention in your math classes this test you should be pretty easy.</p>
<p>800 Math Level 1 and 2…580 on physics lol do schools superscore subject tests too?</p>
<p>Yeah, I treated this as a joke until 2 days before the exam because I was still tired from AP Calculus. The two days before the subject test, I deleted my addicting games (in a way that blocked me from them) and I was quite humbled by all that I had forgotten over the year.</p>
<p>What do full score reports tell you? Does it provide what/how many questions you got wrong?</p>
<p>^No, it just gives you your percentile rank.</p>
<p>800 on math 2 790 chem so happy with my scores</p>
<p>is a 750 bad? i opened the blue book a day before for like an hour and walked in with little to no prep. is it worth taking it again?</p>
<p>It seems that a lot of people are getting these 800s on Math II. I hesitate to use the word “earning” 800 because the margin for error for getting it is quite large. Everyone should keep in mind that the more people that get 800 on your test, the less your 800 means.</p>
<p>There are 11-15% people getting 800 in Math2. This is typical.</p>
<p>Why is there such a huge curve? They’re just giving away 800s…</p>