Anonymous wrote:Kids know whether their close friends care about this discussion or not. My son and his friends talked about scores. They have all different levels of abilities and different talents, and he said his friends' scores ranged from 1100 to 1600. They are not threatened by each others abilities, and they support each other, and are helping each other through the application process. They attend six different high schools and are sharing resources and information. It isn't a competition. They are friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, your kid has told his/her friends his SAT score? And these kids have told your child to retake? This post cannot be real. If it is real, talk to the guidance counselor, not some 17 year olds.
Nothing unreal or abnormal about kids sharing their SAT scores with each other and discussing admission strategies. My DC with similar score (1540/780E/760M) has done that and contemplating retaking SAT.
Yes, there is something wrong with it. These kids are under too much pressure and sharing their high SAT scores is for one reason only--to humble brag and in most instances make others around them feel bad. Teach them to do better. None of my kids or their friends talk about grades or SAT scores. But, they're normal and not super nerds, so maybe that's why.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, your kid has told his/her friends his SAT score? And these kids have told your child to retake? This post cannot be real. If it is real, talk to the guidance counselor, not some 17 year olds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, your kid has told his/her friends his SAT score? And these kids have told your child to retake? This post cannot be real. If it is real, talk to the guidance counselor, not some 17 year olds.
Nothing unreal or abnormal about kids sharing their SAT scores with each other and discussing admission strategies. My DC with similar score (1540/780E/760M) has done that and contemplating retaking SAT.
Yes, there is something wrong with it. These kids are under too much pressure and sharing their high SAT scores is for one reason only--to humble brag and in most instances make others around them feel bad. Teach them to do better. None of my kids or their friends talk about grades or SAT scores. But, they're normal and not super nerds, so maybe that's why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, your kid has told his/her friends his SAT score? And these kids have told your child to retake? This post cannot be real. If it is real, talk to the guidance counselor, not some 17 year olds.
Nothing unreal or abnormal about kids sharing their SAT scores with each other and discussing admission strategies. My DC with similar score (1540/780E/760M) has done that and contemplating retaking SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, your kid has told his/her friends his SAT score? And these kids have told your child to retake? This post cannot be real. If it is real, talk to the guidance counselor, not some 17 year olds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He think he should be able to do better at verbal, is 730 low score for him?
It’s possible. The conventional wisdom is that the verbal section is harder to improve on with tutoring than math, because it’s hard to teach reading comprehension over a short period of time. However — the SAT is set up differently than the ACT, but my kid (who took the ACT) was able to make a considerable improvement on the English (grammar) portion (he brought it up from a 30 to a 35). He already had a 36 on reading, and he can write well, but the format of the grammar questions tripped him up somehow the first time around. He was being tutored to bring his math score up (which also worked), but I think they spent one session on grammar and it made a dramatic difference. He also spent part of one or two sessions with the tutor on Science, and brought his score up from a 33 to a 35. I would look at the details of the questions he missed and see if they are the type that would lend themselves to some “tips and tricks” from a tutor (e.g., grammar vs. reading comprehension”).
Anonymous wrote:He think he should be able to do better at verbal, is 730 low score for him?