SAT Scores Online Countdown

<p>As someone who will be getting his first SAT score tomorrow, I'm wondering what exactly will be on that webpage at 8 AM. I'm not asking for the number, of course, but will they go through section-by-section and tell me what I got? Do they give the raw score? The number of questions correct and incorrect?</p>

<p>This is my first SAT score too, and I'm curious about this as well.</p>

<p>From the CB website:</p>

<p>The SAT Online Score Report
Along with the new SAT comes a new SAT online score report. The SAT online score report is available free to every student who takes the SAT—all you need is a collegeboard.com account.</p>

<p>While you'll still receive your SAT score report in the mail, the SAT online score report contains additional features to help you understand your SAT scores.</p>

<p>Benefits of the SAT Online Score Report: </p>

<p>Your SAT scores online anywhere—at home and at school
A printable copy of your actual essay response
Useful information about your scores, such as the number of questions that you answered right, wrong, or omitted, the total number of questions, your raw score, and the estimated percentile for college-bound seniors based on the test you took.
Your Score History—confirm which SAT tests you've taken and when, your scores, and where you sent them</p>

<p>I Am F'in Stoked.</p>

<p>Am I alone here in suddenly doubting how well I think I did on the SAT? I felt pretty confident after comparing the answers I got to those posted here, but now I'm feeling less and less confident. Anyone else feeling the same thing?</p>

<p>I must make my score post a special number as well. <em>checks post count</em> </p>

<p>Stretch, me too.</p>

<p>(edit)</p>

<p>406...um. Ho hum. Hey if I make it my 411th post...it will be ... 411...AND 4/11! </p>

<p>...</p>

<p>Sorry.</p>

<p>Acacia - Thanks a lot for that info...</p>

<p>Stretch - Same here, but how many times have you done that as a teacher is handing back a test that you were positive you'd done well on? I know I do that all the time and I think it's just the instinctive reaction. We've waited this long and felt a certain way and now that the time is here, we begin to doubt everything we were sure of. Just like they say for the SAT itself, your first thought as to how you did is probably the most accurate.</p>

<p>I'm scared because I thought I did really well on the critical reading and writing mc when comparing answers with people on this board...but now I'm just wondering what if I didn't? I'd be sad because I got my hopes up!</p>

<p>I'm the opposite. I think I did bad, but i'm hoping for more. lol</p>

<p>Actually - uh. I'd disagree with what you said. In my bio class, a test I thought I failed, I ended up getting a 99% on. Then again, the week after, a test I thought I failed, I did fail. So - you just never know.</p>

<p>Test.</p>

<p>I hope I don't have to retake it. I want to be through with standarized tests.</p>

<p>after knowing that i missed two on math, i am screwed...i dont even care any more. usually im extremely nervous the day before but this time im just like...ah **** you ETS.</p>

<p>i hear you zoogies. i want this to be my first and LAST new sat.</p>

<p>What woud you guys say your cut-off score is for not retaking it?</p>

<ol>
<li>Even then, I might retake. 2350 or above, and I would not retake.</li>
</ol>

<p>wow
i think 2300+ for me and i wouldnt retake</p>

<p>damn that seems kind of ridiculous to me. I think 2200+ do the trick just about anywhere</p>

<p>yeah i'd be happy with a 2300. hrm, that's about a 1530 on the old one.</p>

<p>i say 2250+...but I'd much rather have 2300+</p>

<p>me too im starting to doubt, i had this feeling i did really well on verbal bc i got like only 2 wrong when compared to everyone else in the forums but usually i get 7-10 wrong, maybe ill have a luck day (fingers crossed), and can u call at 1201? It would be the 11th</p>

<p>2300 will, percentile wise, anyways, be a greater score than a 1600 on the old SAT. I'm taking the junior PSAT scores here to estimate the percentiles (using 230 as 2300) and find a z-score of 2.837, while a 1600 on the old SAT yields 2.733. I realize that not all SAT takers take the PSAT, and many study inbetween, and I'm also assuming that the scores are normally distributed with the given mean and SD.</p>