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MY SAT: MY SCORE REPORT

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SAT TEST: October 2010

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SUMMARY OF RESULTS

Congratulations on taking the SAT! You're showing colleges that you're serious about getting an education.

The SAT is one indicator of how ready you are to handle college-level work. The test measures the critical thinking skills that you learned in school and that will help you succeed in college.

Learn more about who takes the SAT.

CRITICAL READING: 600

RANGE

When you take a test more than once, your scores may vary. This expected variation is considered your score range.

National Percentile: 80%

TOTAL QUESTIONS CORRECT ANSWERS INCORRECT ANSWERS OMITTED ANSWERS
CRITICAL READING
SENTENCE COMPLETION 19 16 3 0
PASSAGE-BASED READING 48 35 13 0
TOTAL 67 51 16 0

More on Critical Reading: Your Score Details | Compare Your Score

MATHEMATICS: 770

RANGE

When you take a test more than once, your scores may vary. This expected variation is considered your score range.

National Percentile: 98%

TOTAL QUESTIONS CORRECT ANSWERS INCORRECT ANSWERS OMITTED ANSWERS
MATHEMATICS
NUMBERS & OPERATIONS 12 11 1 0
ALGEBRA & FUNCTIONS 20 20 0 0
GEOMETRY & MEASUREMENT 15 15 0 0
DATA ANALYSIS, STATISTICS, & PROBABILITY 7 7 0 0
TOTAL 54 53 1 0

More on Mathematics: Your Score Details | Compare Your Score

WRITING: 770

RANGE

When you take a test more than once, your scores may vary. This expected variation is considered your score range.

National Percentile: 99%

TOTAL QUESTIONS CORRECT ANSWERS INCORRECT ANSWERS OMITTED ANSWERS
WRITING
IMPROVING SENTENCES 25 24 1 0
IDENTIFYING SENTENCE ERRORS 18 18 0 0
IMPROVING PARAGRAPHS 6 5 1 0
MULTIPLE-CHOICE TOTAL 49 47 2 0
ESSAY: 10

More on Writing: Your Score Details | Compare Your Score

 

STEP 1: UNDERSTAND YOUR SAT PERFORMANCE

Using Your online Score Report

  • This online score report provides you with details on your test results. Use it to understand your academic strengths and areas for improvement. It's a tool to help you prepare for the opportunities college offers you.

    Remember, this is not an official score report. You still need to have official score reports sent to the colleges in which you are interested.

    Learn how you did on each section of the test:

    Your Critical Reading Score
    Your Mathematics Score
    Your Writing Score

  • You might want to compare your scores to those of other students in last year's graduating class

    who took the SAT. You can find details about their percentiles,
    average score, grade point averages (GPAs) in high school, and more.

    Now What?

    When you took the SAT, you may have selected some colleges to receive your scores. once you've reviewed your scores, you might want to send them to additional colleges and/or scholarship programs.

    View score reports you've sent
    Send score reports

Understanding Your Scores

  • SAT scores are reported on a 200-800 scale. The writing section has subscores for the essay (2 -12 scale) and for the multiple-choice questions (20 - 80 scale).

    How Your Test Is Scored

    Your scores tell college admissions officers how you did in comparison to other students in the graduating class who took the SAT. The average (or mean) score is approximately 500 in each of the three sections—critical reading, mathematics, and writing. A score of 500 shows that you scored better than about half of the students who took the test.

  • Your SAT score report includes percentiles and
    score ranges to help admissions officers evaluate your scores. The percentiles show how your scores compare to those of other students in the graduating class who took the SAT. The ranges estimate how your scores might vary if you took the test several times over a short period.

    Keep in mind that colleges use more than your SAT scores when making admission decisions. The SAT is only one factor; your high school record, application essays, recommendations, interviews, and extracurricular activities also play important roles.

Want to do better on the SAT?

STEP 2: UNDERSTAND HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR SAT PERFORMANCE

Should You Take the SAT Again?

A majority of students take the SAT more than once, usually for the first time in the spring of their junior year and then again in the fall of their senior year. Taking the SAT again might be to your advantage. Now that you're familiar with the test, you're more prepared for the kinds of questions on it. You're also more comfortable with the test-taking process, including the time limits.

If you take the test again, how might your scores change? You'll find detailed feedback, based on your actual scores, within each section of this score report: Critical Reading, Mathematics, Writing.

STEP 3: RESEARCH COLLEGES, MAJORS, AND CAREERS THAT INTEREST YOU

  • College Acceptance Ranges

    The acceptance range indicates what scores a college expects to see. Learn the acceptance range for any college that you're interested in.

    College Acceptance Ranges

     
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A printout of this page will not be accepted by colleges as an official score report.

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