Anonymous wrote:OP have you explored the possibility of test anxiety? She might have all the ability and be blocked by anxiety when she sits for the test, and even beginning with sleep disturbance in the days leading up to it. A session or more with a therapist to explore this - by herself, without a helicopter parent present (no judgment) - might be a worthwhile investment.
This comes from a JD who went from an 85th to 98th percentile on the LSAT after learning some test anxiety management techniques.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine too. They will continue with tutoring and keep trying. We aren’t looking at ivys so it will be fine. Worst case test optional.
Anyone who would seriously suggest that a kid with a 1440 should be test optional is an insufferable AH. Why are so many outstanding kids stuck with absolutely horrible parents?
Unfortunately some schools do prefer test optional below 1450. Just the reality of college admissions.
Anonymous wrote:This is very similar to my DD’s experience. Top 5% of class in rigorous DMV public charter. 11 APs with mostly 5s (including Calc AB, Bio, Lit, Lang, Apush, stats, etc.). Never got the SAT above 1490 super score. Was very disappointed despite that score being 97/98th percentile (parents were not). Ended up not being an issue for her for many reasons. First, she had narrowed her search to SLACs primarily so she never got swept up in the T20 or bust mindset of most of her academic peers. Also, after visiting a wide range of SLACs, she was a little put off by the prestige choices (had a particularly strong reaction to Swat). Ended up falling in love with one of the “13s”, applied and got in early, and is thriving there now. Probably not the outcome you personally are looking for, but it couldn’t have gone better for our family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine too. They will continue with tutoring and keep trying. We aren’t looking at ivys so it will be fine. Worst case test optional.
Anyone who would seriously suggest that a kid with a 1440 should be test optional is an insufferable AH. Why are so many outstanding kids stuck with absolutely horrible parents?
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is an excellent student taking on the most rigorous classes offered at her DMV private . As a junior, she’s already in AP Calculus BC and AP Lang and excelling in both. Based on the honors list numbers at her school , she’s around the top 10-15% of her class. She took 3 AP classes as a sophomore and scored 5’s on all three.
Here’s the issue: she just can’t seem to do well on the SAT in spite of studying hard for it and having excellent tutors.
She scored a 1460 on the first benchmark blue book practice test with zero prep back in June , so we thought it would be easy to get past the 1500 with some tutoring.
Fast forward 6 months, some 20 tutoring sessions, hours of studying on her own and her December SAT came in at 1440.
Kids at her school who are around her level have mostly scored 1530+.
Granted a 1440 is somewhere around the 96 percentile but it’s not even in the ball park of the schools she was hoping to apply for next year.
She’ll retake the test in the Spring but we are just perplexed at why this is happening. We are also doubtful that her score will go up much in the next 3 months if it hasn’t budged in the last 6 months. How can a student who is clearly capable, prepped so much, not be able to do well on the test?
Has anyone had this experience with their child before ? Would love to hear your thoughts.
No mean comments please.
TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine too. They will continue with tutoring and keep trying. We aren’t looking at ivys so it will be fine. Worst case test optional.
Anyone who would seriously suggest that a kid with a 1440 should be test optional is an insufferable AH. Why are so many outstanding kids stuck with absolutely horrible parents?
Some schools state that they don’t want to see scores below their middle 50%. It’s not personal.