Anonymous
Post 05/28/2025 08:33     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The unwashed masses of Ohio State with over 40,000 students and their freshman class test submitting rate is 20% for SAT and 60% for ACT. Yuck. Who knew absolute dunces were walking amongst us. /s


And any large state school that everyone touts. Even the Southern ones that have the least educated populations. They all must be dummies because of TO.

Sounds silly, right?

Not dummies necessarily, but almost certainly less academically qualified than students submitting test scores.


Submitting scores often just indicates your parents have the funds to spend on multiple tests and professional test prep.


Really? So every kid that does well must be because of funds and test prep??

My kid took it once, paid for by MCPS, no professional test prep, no tutoring. Scored 1570+.

Even rich people can have super smart kids.

More often than not, the high score kids do not use any test prep or tutoring.
Conversely, the ones who use test prep or tutoring often only achieve a mediocre score.
This day and age, there are tons of study materials out there for free. There is no need for tutoring (chegg is out of business).
Also, there are free tutors available from CB.
These standardized tests are not difficult; they primarily assess material that aligns with a standard middle-high school curriculum, including algebra, geometry, reading comprehension, and grammar—subjects students are expected to learn to earn a high school diploma.


Blah, blah, blah.

The test prep industry is a billion dollars for a reason. It keeps the College Board and ACT in business. Superscore anyone?

And the vast majority of UMC families utilize it. Asians basically invented cram mills and their Asian American offspring use some variation of them in the U S. too.

Don't be fooled nor naive.


Kid got 1230 SAT LOL


1230 is 79th percentile LOL STFU


but but your are so mad your kid got 1230 when your Asian neighbor kid got 1530 LOL
Anonymous
Post 05/28/2025 00:03     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Tufts AO told us to submit any score around 1400-ish ... I think pendulum is going to swing to reporting a wider berth of scores.
Anonymous
Post 05/28/2025 00:01     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid went TO with a 1400 because submitted ranges have trended upward since Covid. He has a 3.8 at a T20.



DC has a 1400 - can I ask where you submitted or didn’t submit and was this for ED or RD? Ty.


FWIW this was 2 cycles ago. DS wouldn’t ED so apps were EA and RD. HS counselor instructed him to submit to any VA publics (coming from NoVA) and outside of that I don’t recall the specifics, but the formula was basically looking at where his score fell on the school’s published test score distribution, how the school values test scores, and the percentage of students who submit vs who apply TO. I recall Michigan being a tough call because his score was a little lower but they recommend submitting so more kids do. DS was WL there.
Anonymous
Post 05/28/2025 00:00     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:1400 SAT is 94th percentile. There's not much difference in intelligence between 94th percentile (1400) and 98th percentile (1500).

So I'm sure all the kids who scored 1350 (90th percentile) to 1400 (94th percentile) are doing great in college!

So many other factors are more important than a standardized test you can take infinite number of times.


This is ridiculous! My kid scored 1000 doing great in college. They are super active in the community and contribute to the school. Score has nothing to do with intelligence, at all.
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 23:38     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

1400 SAT is 94th percentile. There's not much difference in intelligence between 94th percentile (1400) and 98th percentile (1500).

So I'm sure all the kids who scored 1350 (90th percentile) to 1400 (94th percentile) are doing great in college!

So many other factors are more important than a standardized test you can take infinite number of times.
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 23:15     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:When evaluating first-year candidates for software engineering jobs we make them take a test, and the highest scorer gets he interview. We don't care about GPA, we should do the same for college entry.


What peer-reviewed data do you have that suggests this is a good idea for your firm?
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 23:14     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:When evaluating first-year candidates for software engineering jobs we make them take a test, and the highest scorer gets he interview. We don't care about GPA, we should do the same for college entry.


How many times do you let them retake the test?


Job interview for SWE takes several rounds, each round the candidate gets another chance to prove themselves.

But this is off the point, you really should let it go. The TO lovers on this board are really out of control. It’s weird how much they love test optional, it’s to the point where I wonder if they have social skills or friends in real life.
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 23:08     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:When evaluating first-year candidates for software engineering jobs we make them take a test, and the highest scorer gets he interview. We don't care about GPA, we should do the same for college entry.


How many times do you let them retake the test?
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 22:42     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The unwashed masses of Ohio State with over 40,000 students and their freshman class test submitting rate is 20% for SAT and 60% for ACT. Yuck. Who knew absolute dunces were walking amongst us. /s


And any large state school that everyone touts. Even the Southern ones that have the least educated populations. They all must be dummies because of TO.

Sounds silly, right?

Not dummies necessarily, but almost certainly less academically qualified than students submitting test scores.


Submitting scores often just indicates your parents have the funds to spend on multiple tests and professional test prep.


Really? So every kid that does well must be because of funds and test prep??

My kid took it once, paid for by MCPS, no professional test prep, no tutoring. Scored 1570+.

Even rich people can have super smart kids.

More often than not, the high score kids do not use any test prep or tutoring.
Conversely, the ones who use test prep or tutoring often only achieve a mediocre score.
This day and age, there are tons of study materials out there for free. There is no need for tutoring (chegg is out of business).
Also, there are free tutors available from CB.
These standardized tests are not difficult; they primarily assess material that aligns with a standard middle-high school curriculum, including algebra, geometry, reading comprehension, and grammar—subjects students are expected to learn to earn a high school diploma.


Blah, blah, blah.

The test prep industry is a billion dollars for a reason. It keeps the College Board and ACT in business. Superscore anyone?

And the vast majority of UMC families utilize it. Asians basically invented cram mills and their Asian American offspring use some variation of them in the U S. too.

Don't be fooled nor naive.


Kid got 1230 SAT LOL


1230 is 79th percentile LOL STFU


yes that's like c+


Not really, an actual grade of C+ in a class isn’t going to be in the 79th percentile. You can keep making yourself look like a moron or STFU
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 22:38     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The unwashed masses of Ohio State with over 40,000 students and their freshman class test submitting rate is 20% for SAT and 60% for ACT. Yuck. Who knew absolute dunces were walking amongst us. /s


And any large state school that everyone touts. Even the Southern ones that have the least educated populations. They all must be dummies because of TO.

Sounds silly, right?

Not dummies necessarily, but almost certainly less academically qualified than students submitting test scores.


Submitting scores often just indicates your parents have the funds to spend on multiple tests and professional test prep.


Really? So every kid that does well must be because of funds and test prep??

My kid took it once, paid for by MCPS, no professional test prep, no tutoring. Scored 1570+.

Even rich people can have super smart kids.

More often than not, the high score kids do not use any test prep or tutoring.
Conversely, the ones who use test prep or tutoring often only achieve a mediocre score.
This day and age, there are tons of study materials out there for free. There is no need for tutoring (chegg is out of business).
Also, there are free tutors available from CB.
These standardized tests are not difficult; they primarily assess material that aligns with a standard middle-high school curriculum, including algebra, geometry, reading comprehension, and grammar—subjects students are expected to learn to earn a high school diploma.


Blah, blah, blah.

The test prep industry is a billion dollars for a reason. It keeps the College Board and ACT in business. Superscore anyone?

And the vast majority of UMC families utilize it. Asians basically invented cram mills and their Asian American offspring use some variation of them in the U S. too.

Don't be fooled nor naive.


Kid got 1230 SAT LOL


1230 is 79th percentile LOL STFU


yes that's like c+
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 22:35     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The unwashed masses of Ohio State with over 40,000 students and their freshman class test submitting rate is 20% for SAT and 60% for ACT. Yuck. Who knew absolute dunces were walking amongst us. /s


And any large state school that everyone touts. Even the Southern ones that have the least educated populations. They all must be dummies because of TO.

Sounds silly, right?

Not dummies necessarily, but almost certainly less academically qualified than students submitting test scores.


Submitting scores often just indicates your parents have the funds to spend on multiple tests and professional test prep.


Really? So every kid that does well must be because of funds and test prep??

My kid took it once, paid for by MCPS, no professional test prep, no tutoring. Scored 1570+.

Even rich people can have super smart kids.

More often than not, the high score kids do not use any test prep or tutoring.
Conversely, the ones who use test prep or tutoring often only achieve a mediocre score.
This day and age, there are tons of study materials out there for free. There is no need for tutoring (chegg is out of business).
Also, there are free tutors available from CB.
These standardized tests are not difficult; they primarily assess material that aligns with a standard middle-high school curriculum, including algebra, geometry, reading comprehension, and grammar—subjects students are expected to learn to earn a high school diploma.


Blah, blah, blah.

The test prep industry is a billion dollars for a reason. It keeps the College Board and ACT in business. Superscore anyone?

And the vast majority of UMC families utilize it. Asians basically invented cram mills and their Asian American offspring use some variation of them in the U S. too.

Don't be fooled nor naive.


Kid got 1230 SAT LOL


1230 is 79th percentile LOL STFU
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 22:33     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

The test score sp@nkers on this board are really out of control. It’s weird how much they love a standardized test, it’s to the point where I wonder if they have social skills or friends in real life.
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 21:36     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:My kid went TO with a 1400 because submitted ranges have trended upward since Covid. He has a 3.8 at a T20.



Similar. Headed to t10
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 21:04     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

Anonymous wrote:My kid went TO with a 1400 because submitted ranges have trended upward since Covid. He has a 3.8 at a T20.



DC has a 1400 - can I ask where you submitted or didn’t submit and was this for ED or RD? Ty.
Anonymous
Post 05/27/2025 20:59     Subject: If your child was TO or below 1400 on the SAT, how are they doing in college?

My kid went TO with a 1400 because submitted ranges have trended upward since Covid. He has a 3.8 at a T20.