Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious, and don't mean to be snarky, but are those folks with perfect 1600 just have that analytical brain and subsequent thought process to ace the SAT?
Therefore, how are you socially ? Awkward? Social anxiety? Introverted? Work best when you're alone ?
No?
Not sure why being smart and quick thinking on your feet would cause social anxiety or introversion?
EQ is a range but your assumptions are odd
Anonymous wrote:Me - fairly mundane professional life where I make $250k as an attorney in a financial services company at the age of 36. Could have strived for more but my highest priority is a relaxed home life, with which the politics and hours of biglaw are incompatible. My DH earns enough for both of us and I continue to work primarily to use my brain and so I don’t have time to micromanage my kids.
Anonymous wrote:
Do you know anyone who aced the SAT? What did they end up doing?
Anonymous wrote:I had a 1600 in 2003. I got a degree in computer science from a state school and teach middle school math.
Sibling had a 1580 in 2004. Got a degree in economics from a different state school and teaches high school social studies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:perfect scores went to harvard law with me. and becane governors and Presidents.
I guarantee you no President got perfect scores.
You don't know that. And Eliot Spitzer came close. Perfect LSATs in wikipedia unless it's neen edited out.
Anonymous wrote:I had a 1600 in 2003. I got a degree in computer science from a state school and teach middle school math.
Sibling had a 1580 in 2004. Got a degree in economics from a different state school and teaches high school social studies.
Anonymous wrote:Are you referring to a perfect score on the SAT old school or modern-day test-prep?
Anonymous wrote:People think about the SAT too much. After you get accepted to a college....the end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:perfect scores went to harvard law with me. and becane governors and Presidents.
I guarantee you no President got perfect scores.
Anonymous wrote:I'm guessing lots of PhD's, STEM, Wall Street financiers, graduates of T14 law schools. And perhaps a few successful authors and creative artists here and there.
Do you know anyone who aced the SAT? What did they end up doing?