<p>What percentile is 2400 SATII. I know 2400 SAT reasoning is 99+, but what is a 2400 on the SATII (math2, physics, chemistry). Do you think more than 1000 kids get it each year? How impressive is this to colleges?</p>
<p>Greed is bad. </p>
<p>Just sayin’</p>
<p>I’m greedy for those SAT points.</p>
<p>SAT II’s are out of 800’s but… this link is helpful! </p>
<p><a href=“College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools”>College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools;
<p>For instance, an 800 on the math II is only an 88%, but that doesn’t look less impressive. you should still take them because some colleges even require them</p>
<p>That is the kind of chart that takes the wind out of your sails; get three 800s on subject tests and you are just run of the mill in percentile ranking. </p>
<p>For admissions, percentile rankings in subject test scores are meaningless. Key is getting high score to show proficiency in a subject and three 800s definitely do that</p>
<p>no because probability of 800IIC * chem * Physics =</p>
<p>.12 * .04 * .07 = .0003 => 99.97 percentile?</p>
<p>sorry i missed the part where it said you took three hahaa
so that is pretty damn impressive</p>
<p>Dude, it doesn’t matter lol</p>
<p>Wow, if you actually think that’s how it works, how did you get an 800 on Math IIC?</p>
<p>Obviously someone who got an 800 on Physics has a greater probably than a randomly selected person to get 800 on chem or physics.</p>
<p>not even close to 99.97 percentile.
probably more like 97.5th</p>
<p>I know a guy who purposely missed some questions so he didn’t get a 2400 (he got like 2370)… I’m not sure why since he’s already in college…</p>
<p>The College Board knows the answer to this question, but they do not publish the data (you would need to know the number of people taking three SAT Subject tests, and then the distribution of combined scores).</p>
<p>Then again, probably very few people ask the question. :)</p>