Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I doubt you’re DS will even get a 35. He’ll probably wilt under the pressure of the real test, which if far different than the controlled conditions of a practice test.
Actually ACT practice and actual test grades are very similar. It really is managing time once you are that high in practice scores. A 35 to 36 is just 1-2 questions wrong. [/quote]
Yeah, sure. But so is a 35 to 34. Just 1-2 more questions wrong.
Is there any reason to do this? His grades are excellent (3.89 unweighted GPA), but his rigor is not strong enough for likely admission to top 20 (only 2 APs and 2 honors this year). He is at a private...not a public where there are APs galore and inflated grades. Next year he plans to take 4 or 5 APs.
DH seems to think the perfect score will be significant and help the fact that he wasn't one of those students that took each and every AP available to him. I don't think so, but thought I would put it out there to get some opinions.
Also, why all those APs next year? He is who he is by that point.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
Calm the F down. Honestly. This is not the end all that be all.
And the comments about private is ridiculous. My daughter is in a top private. You can't take AP's until junior year and most classes are considered honors but are not labeled or inflated. But that is the rigor of her school and that is all you need to be worried about. No one in her school has a weighted GPA over 4. Getting an A is an anomaly. But there are plenty of kids going to Ivy each year. Colleges compare your child's classes to and grades to those of your child's school. So the comment about public means nothing but a jab.
I feel bad for your son. Let him enjoy what little left of his childhood he has.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I doubt you’re DS will even get a 35. He’ll probably wilt under the pressure of the real test, which if far different than the controlled conditions of a practice test.
Actually ACT practice and actual test grades are very similar. It really is managing time once you are that high in practice scores. A 35 to 36 is just 1-2 questions wrong.
Anonymous wrote:I doubt you’re DS will even get a 35. He’ll probably wilt under the pressure of the real test, which if far different than the controlled conditions of a practice test.
Anonymous wrote:DS who is a junior took the ACT yesterday. Prior to taking the test, he had been tracking on his mock tests at 35-36. Hoping to see him get a perfect score or 35.
DH thinks if he gets 35 that he should try again for 36. I disagree because why?
Is there any reason to do this? His grades are excellent (3.89 unweighted GPA), but his rigor is not strong enough for likely admission to top 20 (only 2 APs and 2 honors this year). He is at a private...not a public where there are APs galore and inflated grades. Next year he plans to take 4 or 5 APs.
DH seems to think the perfect score will be significant and help the fact that he wasn't one of those students that took each and every AP available to him. I don't think so, but thought I would put it out there to get some opinions.
Anonymous wrote:DS who is a junior took the ACT yesterday. Prior to taking the test, he had been tracking on his mock tests at 35-36. Hoping to see him get a perfect score or 35.
DH thinks if he gets 35 that he should try again for 36. I disagree because why?
Is there any reason to do this? His grades are excellent (3.89 unweighted GPA), but his rigor is not strong enough for likely admission to top 20 (only 2 APs and 2 honors this year). He is at a private...not a public where there are APs galore and inflated grades. Next year he plans to take 4 or 5 APs.
DH seems to think the perfect score will be significant and help the fact that he wasn't one of those students that took each and every AP available to him. I don't think so, but thought I would put it out there to get some opinions.