Perfect Scores (May & June)

<p>I heard about people getting perfect scores in March (107, I believe), but nothing about May and/or June. Was there any?</p>

<p>It doesn't seem like the College Board is releasing info. I can't find any news articles on the net. The following article references a single student and mentions that...</p>

<p>More than 300,000 U.S. students took the new SAT in March, but only 107 received a perfect 2400. The College Board, the test's publisher, isn't releasing similar information on the May results.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.northbay.com/lifestyle/general/19sat.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.northbay.com/lifestyle/general/19sat.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Yeah... there was one at my school with a 2400 on the May SAT. She made the local newspaper.</p>

<p>Hmm. Well, that is the first I have heard of. It must be the most people who could manage the 2400 took it in March.</p>

<p>i personally know 1 person who got a 2400 on the June SAT, and i've seen 1 or 2 people on CC who got a 2400 on the June SAT.</p>

<p>one guy from another school in my area got a 2400 in May...</p>

<p>I think it's just not as big as a deal since it's not the first testing of the new sat anymore</p>

<p>Although not a perfect score, my friend got a 2390 (11 Essay) on the May SAT.</p>

<p>For some reason, it seems like fewer people are getting perfect scores. On CC, it seemed like 1600s were flooding the boards, and now, it's rare to see scores above 2300...</p>

<p>For a high test scorer used to the old SAT, a 2250 might look like an awful score, but its actually a 750/750/750 breakdown. </p>

<p>Guess its just more opportunities to lose points and a harsher curve.</p>

<p>Good point. The curve was definitely more harsh.</p>