<p>Hey everyone, I'm a new member, so I know this question was probably answered in the archives of this forum several times before, but I have yet to find it. </p>
<p>Therefore, I was wondering: for the SAT Math Curve, what have people that have taked the test repeated times seen?</p>
<p>Specifically, in the College Board book, it says that you can miss up to two and have the possibility of getting an 800, but how often is this really true? What are the trends you've seen?</p>
<p>Ok, great. So...hm...what about this then: I left two blank (I probably could've gotten them if I didn't panic/misread the first question...all well :-) ). In that situation, should you guess on one/both of them? I think maybe one would be fine assuming you didn't get any others wrong, but is it worth the blind guess if you run out of time/didn't eliminate anything?</p>
<p>I thought that if you get two wrong, they round up (-.5 --> -3 total); I remember seeing that as an example rounding they gave somewhere I think, maybe on the PSAT. Am I wrong?</p>
<p>How do you now this? Do they show on the score report how many you get wrong and the points they subtracted for getting it wrong? I can't seem to find a place where they explicitly state what they do (besides what I thought I saw).</p>
<p>I just want ot make sure so I can avoid making the same mistake next time.</p>
<p>In a few number of tests (maybe 2), you can miss 1 question and sill get an 800. Most of the time if you miss one, you will get a 770, 780 or 790.</p>