<p>Did you made it this year ? Do you think you will make it next year or the year after that ?
Currently 10th grade and only have 186. I would be lucky if my score even pass 200 for junior year.</p>
<p>I live in California, so the cutoff is super-high; I’m a sophomore and I got a 216. However, I have a feeling that equivalent averages are going to drop drastically for every state next year because of the new PSAT; of course you won’t pass a 200–the highest score will be 160! Hopefully, however, I’ll get a good score on next year’s PSAT. </p>
<p>We’re technically getting official results from my school tomorrow, but I used the online method to figure out my scores.</p>
<p>how did you guys get your access codes?</p>
<p>@SheepLover I didn’t use my access code; I just logged in and used the long-winded way of doing it, where you go directly to each link. I will be getting my access codes tomorrow with my score report, however.</p>
<p>@topaz1116
What is this long winded way of doing it?</p>
<p>@topaz1116 I am also interested in this long winded way? </p>
<p>@Bulldog97 @SheepLover this is copy pasted from the official PSAT thread:</p>
<ol>
<li>Go to <a href=“Student Score Reports”>Student Score Reports; and sign in to your College Board account.</li>
<li>Go to <a href=“Student Score Reports”>Student Score Reports;
This page will show you the first question and will say at the top if you got it right or wrong.</li>
<li>Change the ‘1’ at the end of the url to ‘2’ and repeat, until you have gone through all the CR questions.</li>
<li>Repeat steps 2-3 but with <a href=“Student Score Reports”>Student Score Reports; for math and <a href=“Student Score Reports”>Student Score Reports; for writing.</li>
<li>Count how many you got wrong and then calculate your score with the curve from <a href=“Understanding PSAT/NMSQT Scores - SAT Suite”>https://www.collegeboard.org/pdf/psat/understanding-psat-nmsqt-scores-guide_0.pdf</a></li>
</ol>