<p>dude aim for 2100+. as you improve, its harder to improve because of the bell like grade curve</p>
<p>aiming for 2350+ is asking to fail. choose a realistic goal and check out your options outside of the ivy league/MIT/stanford (i'm assuming you are aiming for ivies if you want 2350+).</p>
<p>Baelor where did you get your data</p>
<p>wow...
i really do like your attidude in that you strive for excellence!
(you fit right into CC- one thing I love about this forum)</p>
<p>one thing I also dislike about this forum is that it skews one's perception of reality... yes, the SATs matter but when you look back 20 years from now, are you really going to care that much about your SAT score? Are you going to regret not doing something that you like doing because you were studying for a standardized test of all things? Is an Ivy really going to reject you because you missed a couple of more questions than the person sitting next to you?(If they do, then (no offense) they would have rejected you anyways)</p>
<p>I mean seriously, we have a whole life ahead to be stressed out about tests...
You are only going to be in high school once, so make the most of it.</p>
<p>However, I mean if you still really really really really want that score, I would consider taking this one step at a time...
1.) Get study books- I would recommend the 11 SATs book published by collegeboard to start with
2.) 1860 to 2200(thats 340 points assuming that you could improve 110/120 points in each section) when you retake in October.
3.) Re-assess your profile and how it fits into the colleges you are applying to.
4.) Personally, if you are really really unsatisfied and have nothing better to do with your time, then you can retake in November. Otherwise, I would keep the score.</p>
<p>It's hard, I know. The truth is that it is not impossible but just very very unlikely. I really do hope that you get the score you want.</p>
<p>GOOD LUCK!</p>
<p>If you look at any elite college's website, having a perfect score on an a SAT section statistically correlates with acceptance more than a 4.0 GPA.</p>