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Reply to "SAT 8/26/23 -- What did your kid think?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]He said “great” after working with a tutor all summer. And this is a brag, not a humble brag. Well, hopefully it will be a brag when he gets he results. His last score was 1000, and now it feels like 1200 might be within reach.[/quote] Is your DS inclined to submit a 1200 score if that ends up being his highest score? If not, what's the cutoff?[/quote] NP. I believe the general rule is: if a applicant’s score is at the 50th percentile or higher for that specific college (which can be found on the college’s most recent Common Data Set), submit. If lower than 50th percentile, don’t. Standardized tests once existed largely to show colleges that a student, if enrolled, was capable of doing the work at that school. Now the scores serve dual purposes. One of those, unfortunately, is to boost/maintain schools’ rankings (USNWR uses test scores in their rankings formula). So these days applicants have to ask, “might my score bring down this school’s average and thereby hurt their ranking?” Personally, I think it’s absurd. Now, at plenty of schools only a fraction of students submit scores, which renders them fairly meaningless. But here we are. (I hope I’m answering the Q you asked!)[/quote] This is driving me crazy. I have a 1200/1250 kid who I think should be proud of her scores. But she's afraid to submit them anywhere. Some of the colleges she's looking at claim 50th percentiles close to 1300 and I'm just not sure that's true when you factor in all the kids who don't submit. [/quote] She should be proud of her scores. She should also absolutely not submit them unless she’s at the 50th percentile. [/quote]
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