Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they doing well?
I'm going to blow your mind.....
I got a 1240 and I make in the 1% income and have 1% with no parental help. I went to run of the mill state school too, where I graduated summa cum laude, had grad school paid 100% in a science field and worked my way up the corporate ladder.
Oh, I did get a 34 on the ACT though and was in the top 10% of my very large suburban highschool. And because of my ACT score I got 100% scholarship at my state university.
SAT is just a test. It doesn't predict anything.
For a scientist, you have a fairly weakness grasp on what "predict" means.
Sounds like you only took SAT once, and took ACT also for some reason??? and earned a score equivalent to well above OP's 1400.
+1
Lots of lying on this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SATs are the only way to really assess a student's ability. Sorry you can't cheat on the SAT like you could in classes and are upset. 🤷‍♀️
Only way? Stop being delulu. You can't cheat on the SAT but you can certainly retake it over and over until you get the score you want. Does that sound like a great assessment of a student's ability? At my kid's HS, the most you can retake a test (if they even allow it) is once.
It’s flawed, but the closet thing we’ve got. Can’t trust grades and gpa.
The Admissions Officers will make that call. Not you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SATs are the only way to really assess a student's ability. Sorry you can't cheat on the SAT like you could in classes and are upset. 🤷‍♀️
Only way? Stop being delulu. You can't cheat on the SAT but you can certainly retake it over and over until you get the score you want. Does that sound like a great assessment of a student's ability? At my kid's HS, the most you can retake a test (if they even allow it) is once.
Clearly you can't take it over and over until you get the score you want or every college would have a 1600-1600 SAT range. Do you losers ever tire of being illogical?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SATs are the only way to really assess a student's ability. Sorry you can't cheat on the SAT like you could in classes and are upset. 🤷‍♀️
Only way? Stop being delulu. You can't cheat on the SAT but you can certainly retake it over and over until you get the score you want. Does that sound like a great assessment of a student's ability? At my kid's HS, the most you can retake a test (if they even allow it) is once.
It’s flawed, but the closet thing we’ve got. Can’t trust grades and gpa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SATs are the only way to really assess a student's ability. Sorry you can't cheat on the SAT like you could in classes and are upset. 🤷‍♀️
Only way? Stop being delulu. You can't cheat on the SAT but you can certainly retake it over and over until you get the score you want. Does that sound like a great assessment of a student's ability? At my kid's HS, the most you can retake a test (if they even allow it) is once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SATs are the only way to really assess a student's ability. Sorry you can't cheat on the SAT like you could in classes and are upset. 🤷‍♀️
Only way? Stop being delulu. You can't cheat on the SAT but you can certainly retake it over and over until you get the score you want. Does that sound like a great assessment of a student's ability? At my kid's HS, the most you can retake a test (if they even allow it) is once.
Anonymous wrote:SATs are the only way to really assess a student's ability. Sorry you can't cheat on the SAT like you could in classes and are upset. 🤷‍♀️
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.
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.
Why do kids with higher test scores perform much better in college than kids who don't submit test scores then? Why does study after study find this?
Out of curiosity, can you share the links to these studies?
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.
Why do kids with higher test scores perform much better in college than kids who don't submit test scores then? Why does study after study find this?
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.
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.