<p>Satiiwh: 800
apwh: 5</p>
<p>So I just put all the SAT II scores and AP scores in my calculator and graphed them. The correlation is horrible (this is for all AP scores vs. all SAT II scores; not grouped by subject).</p>
<p>The equation (so far) was: (AP SCORE) = ((3.6021x10^-3)x(SAT II SCORE)) + 2.01160512
But r was only 0.3911 (r^2 = 0.153) - if you’re not familiar with stats, that just means that only 15% of the variation in the AP scores can be explained by the variation in the SAT II scores (textbook definitions FTW). :</p>
<p>I think it would be interesting to see what the correlation is by subject (the SAT II Math seems to be a good predictor here, while some of the others seem absolutely useless) - anyone bored enough to do that? xD</p>
<p>Biology M: 5, 800
Chemistry: 5, 800
Math II/Calc BC: 5, 800</p>
<p>World History, 5, 690
Biology (M), 5, 740
Calculus AB / Math II, 5, 800
US History, 5, 800
Physics B, 5, 800</p>
<p>Math II: 740/5 (Calc AB)</p>
<p>World History: 770/5</p>
<p>World
AP:4 SATII:780</p>
<p>@estrat1</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Actually, SAT Math 2 predicts nothing about AP scores, given the data we have here, since everyone got a 5 on the AP Calc tests in this sample, while the SAT scores vary from 560 to 800. (However, as SAT scores went up, more people took BC. Everyone under 750 on the SAT Math 2 took AB, while most people above 750 took BC.)</p>
<p>I put all of this stuff into an Excel spreadsheet. I’m only going to do US history right now since that has the most data (besides math, which I already addressed above):</p>
<p>A = (0.0046)S + 1.2527 (where A = AP score, S = SAT score)
r^2 = 0.114</p>
<p>Not much of a predictor. (Of course, we only have 14 data points, so…)</p>
<p>AP World: 5, SAT II World History: 720</p>
<p>AP USH: 3 [getting a rescore], SAT II USH: 710</p>
<p>AP Spanish: 5, SAT II Spanish: 770</p>
<p>AP Chem: 5, SAT II Chem: 790, IB Chem SL: 6
AP French: 5, SAT II French: 730, IB French B SL: 6</p>
<p>And, FWIW</p>
<p>AP Comparative Gov. & Politics: 5, SAT II World: 800</p>
<p>SAT:</p>
<p>SAT Subject Tests:
Literature:800 class: B+/A-, AP grade:5
Spanish:800 class: B+
Biology:800 class: B+/B/B, AP grade:5
USH:800 class: A-/A, AP grade:5
Math II:800 class: B+/A-, AP grade:5
German:800 class: B+/A-, AP grade:5</p>
<p>AP Scores
55555/ 55555554555
AP AP US
AP Gov (Comp.)
AP Lit
AP Calc
AP Bio
AP German </p>
<p>AP European History
AP Stats
AP Eng Lit
AP Eng Lang
AP Chem
AP World History
AP US Gov
AP Art History
AP Psychology</p>
<p>^ It kind of seems as though you are tooting your own horn a bit too much when you share your SAT score here. :)</p>
<p>AP Macro
AP Micro
One AP or two APs?</p>
<p>Thanks guys.</p>
<p>Sorry my dear Silverturtle,
All I can say is… I love you and I was not tooting my horn.
Let me edit it.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>They count as two.</p>
<p>Done!
Thanks Silver :)</p>
<p>Bio - 770 (M), 5
USH - 800, 5
Calc BC - 800 (II), 5</p>
<p>Bio M- 800, AP Bio 5</p>
<p>I’m with everyone else on this one. The SAT II was fantastically easy compared to the AP!</p>
<p>Bio M 790 - AP Bio 5
Chem 770 - AP Chem 5
MathII 800 - AP Calc BC and AB Subscore 5
US Hist 720 (lol) - AP US History 5</p>
<p>World History
Subject Test - 760
AP Test - 5</p>
<p>French: SAT II – 760, AP: 5
German: SAT II – 640, AP: 4
US History: SAT II – 680 AP: 4</p>
<p>Just a pattern I’ve noticed: it seems that SAT II scores of 600+ yield 4s on the AP, while scores of 700+ result in 5s. Wouldn’t you agree?</p>