<p>Is there a website that gives you the mean, and median subject tests scores for different colleges? </p>
<p>Is a x score on a subject test equivalent to a x score on a section of the reasoning test?</p>
<p>Is there a website that gives you the mean, and median subject tests scores for different colleges? </p>
<p>Is a x score on a subject test equivalent to a x score on a section of the reasoning test?</p>
<p>I don’t think they release the SAT II averages for specific colleges, but you can find the SAT II averages by subject here:</p>
<p>[SAT</a> Average (Mean) Scores](<a href=“College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools”>Understanding SAT Scores – SAT Suite | College Board)</p>
<p>Yeah, but that really doesn’t tell me much - I’m looking at Reed, University of Chicago, Cornell, etc… and so I was wondering about the scores for those types of schools.</p>
<p>Probably anything above 700 is good for those above ones.</p>
<p>For example I’m planning to take Math II in June, and I’m not quit sure what my target score should be - Obviously, I’d like to get a 800, but I’m not quite sure if I’ll be able to get that because a) I’ve got to do a bunch of review (I’ve forgotten alg I + geometry) and b) I’m prone to make silly mistakes. Anyways, would it hurt me if I got say a 750?</p>
<p>800 on mathII is pretty “easy” compared to 800 on mathI since there you have to have all correct in order to get a perfect score. whilst on mathII one can have 2 or 3 careless mistakes but still get a 800. i got a 800 with all correct if I remember correctly :P</p>
<p>but what is better is to look at percentiles, lets say you want to go to top college lets say 90% percentile then a score of 800 would do you good on mathII since that is equivalent to 92% percentile.</p>