Anonymous wrote:Bill Clinton score around 1040 and George W 1200.[b] Obama had an ACT of around 30.
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:I got a 1590 which I believe is 99th percentile. I work part time as a preschool assistant. đ
Anonymous wrote:In the 90s, my brother got a 1560 on the SAT. I think we figured he got like 2 questions wrong or something like that. Double ivy grad, now a partner at a law firm. Boring but successful career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Don't know them personally, but two people that got 1590 (I believe) are Lady Gaga and Ben Affleck. The guitarist from Linkin Park went to Cal Tech so I imagine he crushed the SATs, too.
Affleck is older than I am so that was before the curve adjustment so if he really got a 1590, thatâs impressive. My memory is that back then there were only a couple 1600s per year, or fewer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got 2 questions wrong on the SAT (perfect math score) which in that round was a 1550. He took the SAT when he was only 14 on top of it all. In the end, he got rejected from 75% of the colleges applied to (thanks Covid, TO, and AA) and is finishing up undergrad (triple major) and applying to grad school, which will likely be another blood bath. He is a stand out academic and intern but the road was not paved with gold for him, that is for sure but I know he will be very successful in life becuase he is great at what he does and he loves what he does. Oh and as for personality, he went to college a friendly introvert and has turned into a pretty bold extrovert. Funny how much they can evolve, even once you think their personality is set.
Or maybe your kid didnât have enough other things going for him beyond a 1550 (which is not _that_ uncommon) to put on his app. People always want to blame everything else (COVID, TO, URMs). They are only so many seats in each class, and admissions officers arenât distinguishing between people who get a 1520 and a 1560 or whether itâs in one sitting or four. As you said, it all works out, but I would chock your sonâs results up to scarcity.
âsigned a parent whose URM kid had the same score in a single sitting before junior year, but who is under no illusions about why heâs not going to HYPS.
The PP never said anything about HYPS but Covid and AA were a big factor in college admissions for HS class of '22 and '23 and URM with lesser scores and stats were prioritized.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got 2 questions wrong on the SAT (perfect math score) which in that round was a 1550. He took the SAT when he was only 14 on top of it all. In the end, he got rejected from 75% of the colleges applied to (thanks Covid, TO, and AA) and is finishing up undergrad (triple major) and applying to grad school, which will likely be another blood bath. He is a stand out academic and intern but the road was not paved with gold for him, that is for sure but I know he will be very successful in life becuase he is great at what he does and he loves what he does. Oh and as for personality, he went to college a friendly introvert and has turned into a pretty bold extrovert. Funny how much they can evolve, even once you think their personality is set.
Or maybe your kid didnât have enough other things going for him beyond a 1550 (which is not _that_ uncommon) to put on his app. People always want to blame everything else (COVID, TO, URMs). They are only so many seats in each class, and admissions officers arenât distinguishing between people who get a 1520 and a 1560 or whether itâs in one sitting or four. As you said, it all works out, but I would chock your sonâs results up to scarcity.
âsigned a parent whose URM kid had the same score in a single sitting before junior year, but who is under no illusions about why heâs not going to HYPS.
Anonymous wrote:My son got 2 questions wrong on the SAT (perfect math score) which in that round was a 1550. He took the SAT when he was only 14 on top of it all. In the end, he got rejected from 75% of the colleges applied to (thanks Covid, TO, and AA) and is finishing up undergrad (triple major) and applying to grad school, which will likely be another blood bath. He is a stand out academic and intern but the road was not paved with gold for him, that is for sure but I know he will be very successful in life becuase he is great at what he does and he loves what he does. Oh and as for personality, he went to college a friendly introvert and has turned into a pretty bold extrovert. Funny how much they can evolve, even once you think their personality is set.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Don't know them personally, but two people that got 1590 (I believe) are Lady Gaga and Ben Affleck. The guitarist from Linkin Park went to Cal Tech so I imagine he crushed the SATs, too.
Linkin Park? I grew up with some of them...None of them went to Caltech. Brad Delson and Dave Farrell went to UCLA and Mike Shinoda went to art school. Robert Bourdon went to Community College and Chester Bennington didn't go to college.
I know The Offspring lead singer has a PhD in some STEM field...the group Boston has a bunch of MIT grads.