<p>I know that people are going to reply saying to take it at what I think is the best time, but could you guys suggest which month of next year is the best for taking the SAT?</p>
<p>I'm taking Math Level 2 in October, and I might be taking a language in November. </p>
<p>Also, should I wait for my PSAT results to come back first before taking the SAT?</p>
<p>may or june of junior years hands down. After you've been studying for finals/APs if you have them, you will be in tip-top shape for the SATs. If finals are the same week as the SAT, take it in the other month.</p>
<p>You should DEFFINITLY wait for PSAT results before you take sats, because you really don't want to f*** up the SATs your first time, as they send all your scores</p>
<p>I would say take one in january/february and the other in may/june so that you can learn from your mistakes on the first one, yet it will generally be in recent memory when taking the second one as well as attaining more knowledge throughout your senior year.</p>
<p>My mom just told me not to take the SAT in October or November, as that's when most of the seniors take the SAT and be really competitive for some reason. </p>
<p>I am definetly going to take it after my PSAT results return. So that means any time on February-June, except May where I have massive AP Testing.</p>
<p>Think maybe they make it harder in the Fall so more people will not do as good and retake it in the Spring? That's what I heard they do with the ACT.</p>
<p>Im gonna be a senior next year and i recommend doing what i did. Take the SATs in OCT/NOV. Yeah you wont have your PSAT scores and in fact you'll be taking the SAT before the PSAT. However this way you can take the SAT right after your summer of studying. In addition, in May you will be working on AP testing and that time is better reserved for SAT IIs (for example i took SAT2 US history the day after the APUSH test). Then come June i got an early case of senioritis ;) so i personally wouldnt recommend taking the SAT then. Taking it early in the year and getting it over with is like taking a huge rock of your back for the rest of the year. That way you dont have to worry about it and instead worry about your grades throughout the year.</p>
<p>My SAT scores in OCT 05 = 2180
My PSAT scores in OCT 05 = 212 (5 more pts for semifinalist in Cali :| )</p>
<p>OH and BTW the curves are predetermined so taking it when Seniors are taking it will not affect your scores.</p>
<p>agreed; however, the curves are kinda harsh in jan. my writing was down 90 point from my psat
psat- 78V 76 M 78 W
sat- 800v 800m 690W (66sub)
i don't recommend jan, it seems strange to have droped 120 point in writing (only subscore) and puts me in the dilemma of whether to retake or not.</p>
<p>Three times is generally a good number. There's a thread that discusses that. </p>
<p>Thanks for those responses! I'm taking SAT Math IIC in October, so maybe November should be a good date? My main reason for not taking it in the fall is because I have Marching Band and that already takes up a lot of time. My sophomore year PSAT scores were terrible, but that was without prep. Now I have a better overview of the SAT. </p>
<p>Does it really matter that I wait for my PSATs to come back?</p>
My mom just told me not to take the SAT in October or November, as that's when most of the seniors take the SAT and be really competitive for some reason.
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<p>This is a common myth. While it is true that a lot of seniors take SATs in the late fall, it is also true that the curve for the SATs is determined beforehand. So your score is independent of the other people taking the test.</p>
<p>yea i was wondering about that curve... b/c it doesn't seem fair to base the curve on how well your peers do. You're supposed to compete against the test, not other people- at least on SAT's.</p>
<p>the curve cannot always be predetermined.
my daughter took the june 2006 SAT and 2 questions were not counted from her writing section.
Everyone who took that Form of the test, had their writing score determined out of 47 questions not 49, so how could a predtermined curve reflect that unexpected change.</p>