SAT II test results are NOT added up. They are reviewed individually, as a tertiary filter after GPA/SAT I scores. Your Math 2c score is impressive, and youre Lit/Bio scores are quite decent. What's more important, though, is your ACT or SAT I score. Based on your test results I strongly recommend that you take the ACT; in my experience, people who are good at math/sciences do much better on the ACT than on the SAT I. Most schools will accept either, so take both if you aren't sure. Better yet, attend a free practice test at your local Kaplan center to see which test is "kinder" to you.
good luck!
2006-11-07 20:35:29
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answer #1
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answered by Lighty 3
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in case you're graduating in the previous 2012, maximum faculties will evaluate basically your examining and math scores which may be 1120 out of 1600. in spite of the undeniable fact that, after 2012, faculties will start to seem in any respect 3 parts of the SAT which might flow the perfect score as much as 2400 and make your score 1620. desire i helped.
2016-10-21 07:28:09
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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it looks like you haven't taken the SAT reasoning test. that's where you add your scores. you've taken three SAT subject tests. there are only four schools that require three of those (harvard, princeton, yale, georgetown), and for those schools your scores are way too low.
for others, though, they might be fine. take the SAT reasoning (the big one) and see how you do there.
2006-11-05 05:49:42
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answer #3
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answered by donlockwood36 4
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did they change it. It used to be that you could only get a 1600. and anything over a 1100 was great for the colleges. that was only 3 years ago
2006-11-07 15:52:05
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answer #4
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answered by km 1
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thats like a C or a D if you look at it grade wise. Eh, its alright.
2006-11-05 02:37:35
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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i think those are SAT II. did you take SAT I or ACT?
2006-11-05 03:12:42
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answer #6
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answered by cool nerd 4
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yes
2006-11-05 02:58:43
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answer #7
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answered by Joe 3
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