<p>Student A:
SAT #1 (760 CR, 780 M, 800 W)
SAT #2 (740 CR, 790 M, 800W) </p>
<p>OR </p>
<p>Student B:
SAT #1 (750 CR, 800 M, 700 W)</p>
<p>Who would you rather be?</p>
<p>Student A:
SAT #1 (760 CR, 780 M, 800 W)
SAT #2 (740 CR, 790 M, 800W) </p>
<p>OR </p>
<p>Student B:
SAT #1 (750 CR, 800 M, 700 W)</p>
<p>Who would you rather be?</p>
<p>Student A is obviously you. Anyhow, it seems like a no-brainer. Student A has a super-score of a 2350 and a single sitting of 2340. Student B has a 2250. The advantage that Student B has is his 800 in math and 10 point lead in the CR + M combo. Still want A. Either way though, you'd be golden with the SAT.</p>
<p>haha yeah, A of course</p>
<p>ok, obviously A, but here's where it gets harder. suppose each student gets a 2250 total which one would be most favorable?
a) 800 M 800 CR 650 W
b) 800 M 650 CR 800 W
c) 650 M 800 CR 800 W
d) 750 M 750 CR 750 W</p>
<p>why would B have any competition?</p>
<p>i must be missing something.</p>
<p>"The advantage that Student B has is his 800 in math and 10 point lead in the CR + M combo." </p>
<p>ingette- that's why, I believe. </p>
<p>some colleges don't even consider the writing section. however, best bet is student a. just better i think.</p>
<p>knew there was something! hah.</p>
<p>Definitely STUDENT A!</p>
<p>Depends who's hotter.</p>