Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD feels so defeated. After waiting 30 minutes extra to be checked in due to long lines she had a WIFI outtage towards the end of the 2nd harder math section and half way through the wifi never returned and after all that she was told she had no recourse except to have the test cancelled!
There are no September seats left in our region and now she's scrambling to find a seat for October or November.
I am soo frustrated with the College Board and this whole rat race! There is no SAT at her school so we were counting on this.
What was the testing site?
Anonymous wrote:Here is what my DC did:
Self studied Khan Academy and took the test June of sophomore year (this was DC’s idea to get a feel for the test). Got a 1440.
Took a prep course fall of junior year timed to the November test. This was due to summer activity that DC was away from home most of the summer. Goal was to align prepping for the test with the PSAT.
Signed up for the December test because we know that some students just do better the second time taking it back to back.
NMSF score on PSAT
1490 SAT in November
1540 SAT in December (770 M and V)
35 ACT in December (only specific prep for the ACT was a book and onetime tests)
DC worked hard studying for the test.
Done
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, here are some of the vocal words kids on reddit say were super hard: foment, attrition, sporadic, pervade, supersede, pretext, conjecture
We did a ton of vocab, focusing on words that websites said were critical for the SAT. None of those were on it! Hopefully my kid knew them!
Other than foment (maybe) does anyone else think these wards are tough for college-bound teens? (Serious question - not being snarky.)
Anonymous wrote:DD feels so defeated. After waiting 30 minutes extra to be checked in due to long lines she had a WIFI outtage towards the end of the 2nd harder math section and half way through the wifi never returned and after all that she was told she had no recourse except to have the test cancelled!
There are no September seats left in our region and now she's scrambling to find a seat for October or November.
I am soo frustrated with the College Board and this whole rat race! There is no SAT at her school so we were counting on this.
Anonymous wrote:What is a SAT forgiving curve?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, here are some of the vocal words kids on reddit say were super hard: foment, attrition, sporadic, pervade, supersede, pretext, conjecture
We did a ton of vocab, focusing on words that websites said were critical for the SAT. None of those were on it! Hopefully my kid knew them!
Other than foment (maybe) does anyone else think these wards are tough for college-bound teens? (Serious question - not being snarky.)
There was one more really hard word that I didn't know but have forgotten it. So this isn't a complete list.
Other than foment (maybe) does anyone else think these wards are tough for college-bound teens? (Serious question - not being snarky.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, here are some of the vocal words kids on reddit say were super hard: foment, attrition, sporadic, pervade, supersede, pretext, conjecture
We did a ton of vocab, focusing on words that websites said were critical for the SAT. None of those were on it! Hopefully my kid knew them!
Other than foment (maybe) does anyone else think these wards are tough for college-bound teens? (Serious question - not being snarky.)
I don't think that is quite true. I paid $5000 for a private tutor to help DS improve his score. It wouldn't have improved if he didn't have some basic level of intelligence, but he's in a better position than someone whose parents could not hire a tutor and had his same basic level of intelligence. The test is still slanted towards the rich, which is unfortunate.
Affluent students who can afford private tutoring/prep do have some advantage for standardized tests, but the money, time, and parental availability necessary to become a recruitable athlete or rack up impressive sounding extracurriculars or internships for “holistic review” favors the wealthy even more.