1350: 730 math, 620 verbaltook it a 2nd time to try and break 1400, but got a bit lower.
3/21/2011 1:53:10 AM
3/21/2011 1:53:13 AM
I posted my gre analytical score and juxtaposed it against the fact that I went home and microwaved a pizza. the fact that you clipped off the latter half is your editorial decision, but I don't quite think you're going to win an I don't give a fuck argument with me.
3/21/2011 1:55:02 AM
given that you started it, it's pretty easy actually.
3/21/2011 1:56:56 AM
you were doing good when you were quoting rushmore. I even made an eli cash reference last night.but then you had to go and point everyone to your self-congratulatory thread. that's wher eI draw the line, buddy.
3/21/2011 1:58:49 AM
clearly, this is a man who gives a fuck.
3/21/2011 2:00:56 AM
nice retort. berkeley can do better
3/21/2011 2:02:06 AM
i know they can, that's what makes it so exciting.
3/21/2011 2:04:07 AM
3/21/2011 2:05:09 AM
i'm okay w/ that.
3/21/2011 2:06:17 AM
you are forgiven
3/21/2011 2:07:12 AM
ha, i didn't catch that.okay very nice.
3/21/2011 2:09:13 AM
I always thought that the SAT was a way of cutting out students that didn't come from decent homes.It seems like students that do well on those have parents with money and support them with classes and such.It is definitely not a measure of how smart someone is. Obviously this is a sore subject.[Edited on March 21, 2011 at 2:22 AM. Reason : edit]
3/21/2011 2:19:06 AM
I went from a 1340 to a 1380 on the old SAT and was disappointed because I thought I would do better.Then I took the GRE and got 800 quant and 580 verbal with a 4/4 (whatever the highest was) for the essay at the end. Ended up dropping out of grad school because my undergrad GPA was too low to get financial aid (and insulin isn't free :V) but hoopty testicles.Now I just want to learn practical engineering stuff so I can actually become a proper professional engineer. I'm realizing that a master's degree would be neat but not essential long-term.
3/21/2011 3:22:38 AM
1380 and 1420 on the SATi don't even remember my GRE score[Edited on March 21, 2011 at 7:40 AM. Reason : GRE]
3/21/2011 7:40:02 AM
^In the other thread you said you "aced it with out studying."I assumed that meant you made a perfect score on the GRE.
3/21/2011 8:20:05 AM
i remember doing pretty well considering i had to go shit my brains out in the middle of the math section
3/21/2011 8:24:37 AM
Took it once and got a 1360.
3/21/2011 8:25:07 AM
1580I was beaten by my parents when my scores came back
3/21/2011 8:42:29 AM
3/21/2011 8:50:54 AM
3/21/2011 8:58:13 AM
3/21/2011 9:00:45 AM
3/21/2011 9:00:51 AM
I try not to be too judgmental about scores.But if my kid scored like a 750/800 on the math+verbal portions of the SAT, I would be extremely pissed at their school for not preparing them better. Super pissed! It doesn't mean my kid's dumb or that they can't go to college and pursue their dreams...but it does mean that somebody done messed something up in the 13 years they were supposed to be prepping my kid for college.
3/21/2011 9:20:18 AM
i agree (as would most college-educated folks) that the SAT is flawed measure of "intelligence" and that it is given too much weight by many colleges (though it may have changed since i've graduated high school)i don't know what the solution is, though...the whole point of standardization is to provide a common baseline that schools from all areas can use as a target...when the school knows what the students will be tested on, i think you're correct in assuming that blame oftentimes lies with the teachers/school/system and not necessarily with the studentthen again, not all people learn the same way (and some are especially good or bad with standardized testing) and so they can only cater to the majorityseems to me that those who don't test well tend to become "artists" or the like
3/21/2011 9:25:48 AM
3/21/2011 9:27:07 AM
i preferred the ACT
3/21/2011 9:29:55 AM
^^There are entire counties in NC where less than half the kids take the SAT, and even then, they average slightly above 800. Those kids take advanced classes and make good grades. How are their parents supposed to know when they are struggling in a subject or not being prepared properly for college the SAT?[Edited on March 21, 2011 at 9:51 AM. Reason : ]
3/21/2011 9:48:15 AM
I got 12 something and got a ton of shit from my parents for it. I don't test well, eventually standardized testing becomes a boring guessing game when I'm over it. I've never tested well actually.It got me into the school I wanted though so I didn't care.
3/21/2011 9:52:31 AM
parental involvement is extremely importantthat said, i doubt it's either the parents or the teachers/school/system that are solely at fault
3/21/2011 9:53:50 AM
^^^I don't know anything about those counties so I can't really make an educated comment, but if they are aware of how terrible the school system is, they could take an active role in the PTA or school board.
3/21/2011 9:55:36 AM
3/21/2011 9:57:27 AM
3/21/2011 10:08:50 AM
^^http://datacenter.kidscount.org/data/bystate/Map.aspx?state=NC&loct=5&map_colors=Solid&dtm=4744&ind=2270&tf=38Those are the average scores, and that chart doesn't even account for the fact that, in plenty of those places, less than half the students even take the SAT. So it's literally the top 40 percent of students who are averaging those scores.I'm just saying I would be pissed if it happened to my kid.
3/21/2011 10:14:54 AM
^^ I mean, you certainly might be right because I don't have any facts to back my opinion up. I just have a hard time believing that considering I didn't study or prep AT ALL for the test and a good majority of my friends didn't either and they did fine. Like I said, I certainly can see people doing poorly in school (grades) AND the SAT due to uninvolved parents (I don't think "poor" has hardly anything to do with it unless that is a direct result of the parents themselves being uneducated...in which case THAT is the factor not the lack of $) but I would like to see some hard facts showing a large % of kids doing really well at a decent school who score an 800 on the SATs. Perhaps, as I stated in my previous post, the kids making good grades were really just the "top" kids at a school with a lot of not-so-smart kids and curving skews the results at these schools (iow a 3.8 at school X ~= a 3.8 at school y).^ I guess the only other thing I can think of/say is that those areas don't attract a lot of teachers so they obviously have a slightly more mediocre crop of teachers. I mean do you want to force teachers to go to those areas? I don't really know what there is to discuss there. I don't think it is really the teachers fault, rather the parents who chose to live somewhere and/or aren't involved in their kids' education.It's certainly a bit of a self-perpetuating cycle and I don't think you can blame the teachers completely at all. There are certainly lazy and bad teachers but in my experience I have hardly EVER met a student who had involved parents who did very poorly in school (obviously there is a ceiling based on their intelligence - not everyone is a 4.0 student regardless of school and parenting).[Edited on March 21, 2011 at 10:32 AM. Reason : .]
3/21/2011 10:17:24 AM
3/21/2011 10:21:53 AM
Not that SAT scores really matter these days. With the amount of remedial classes a lot of freshmen have to take I have to wonder what the point is at all.
3/21/2011 10:25:51 AM
It matters if you are swinging for the fences in terms of the Stanford, Harvard types.
3/21/2011 10:31:41 AM
Obviously I am not an expert on this but I'll just add this even though I have stated very similar stuff several times in here. I only know what worked in my personal life but I think it is something that would work for most kids:My parents put a lot of effort in to make sure my sister and I understood the value of our education. They were very unselfish and took a lot of their own time to assist us in school however we needed but more importantly they took the "teach" not "do" approach with our work. They didn't do anything for us but always made sure to help us with whatever they could. I don't think it is any coincidence that my sister and I both graduated in the top 10 of our class (not just 10%) when we were probably in the bottom 1% of income at the school we attended.
3/21/2011 10:33:32 AM
You're on TWW. It's overachieving nerd central.My mom made a perfect score on the GRE. And we read books together. And, no, she never did my work for me. And they put it in a lot of effort and blah, blah, blah.I think that's the case for 85% of the posters in this thread.You don't need to keep talking about it.[Edited on March 21, 2011 at 10:51 AM. Reason : Wait--do you have kids yourself? Is that what this is about?]
3/21/2011 10:49:34 AM
1440 on my first attempt...my anal retentive parental units made me take it 4 more times
3/21/2011 10:51:01 AM
1240: 720 verbal, 520 math. I don't remember my exact GRE score but it was similarly lopsided. I'm not great at math but I'm certainly not inept. But I don't do well on math standardized tests.
3/21/2011 10:54:17 AM
Good thing my shitty SAT score/lack of care about my SAT score doesn't correlate with me kicking ass in school.Because I did
3/21/2011 10:54:52 AM
^^^^ not yet. The reason I keep talking about it is that people are saying that kids 1) without money don't have a chance at the SAT and 2) that teachers aren't doing their job to prepare the kids and 3) how are the parents supposed to know...My post addresses all 3 of those so I fail to see how it doesn't apply and I need to stop saying it.[Edited on March 21, 2011 at 10:59 AM. Reason : .]
3/21/2011 10:55:48 AM
Madman is like a really shitty version of chance
3/21/2011 11:01:14 AM
^^it doesn't apply because it's a singular anecdote. no one's saying it's not possible for someone from a poor family to succeed - it's just less likely
3/21/2011 11:02:46 AM
I guess the point I was trying to make was that yes you might not have as good of teachers at poorer schools but I also think there is a big drop off in parent involvement with poor families and I think that has as much or more to do with the kids not succeeding than the teachers. I also don't think it has to do with the actual ability to spend money on tutoring, test prep etc. rather the poorer families have parents who are generally poorer because they are uneducated and don't value education the same way and thus don't spend as much time with their kids.
3/21/2011 11:10:06 AM
i never bragged about SAT scores...
3/21/2011 11:12:09 AM
3/21/2011 11:29:01 AM
^^ I agree thats what i was tryin to say
3/21/2011 11:29:09 AM