I am not sure how accurate an indicator it really is; there are a lot of other more significant factors such as a student's goals, motivation, learning speed, etc. Persistence and drive are much more important in determining one's success. I got a 1420/1600 SAT and 4.2 GPA in high school, and will graduate from university in a few months with ~3.5 GPA, but irregardless of standardized scores, I feel that my commitment to doing well was what allowed me to do so. Numbers can never determine one's potential and capacity.
2007-09-04 16:51:20
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Nope, they didn't! I had average SAT scores, I don't even remember what I had. But it doesn't matter anyway. School scores don't matter in general. I got a 4.0 in college now, and I'm graduating soon too. Every person is so unique, special and intricate. There's no way they can be described by some number. Grades don't matter, only your personal growth does. Use excellent grades to increase your trust in yourself that you can achieve everything you want. That's the way I treat it. After college decide what YOU wanna do, not your advisers, career-planners, or whoever. If you feel like you wanna be an entrepreneur and start from scratch, so be it! That's the path I chose! I wish you the best of luck!
2007-09-04 20:11:53
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answer #2
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answered by Go Getter 2
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First time I took the SAT 750.
2nd time 900 SAT, honor student 3.8 GPA. high school.
3.9 GPA College.
My comprehension is very high. My read rate is below average.
I almost never do good on time sensitive exams.
Best example.
I read a William Shakespeare story in HS. 2 years later I had to take a test on the same story in College. I didn't bother reading the story again because I remembered all the details. I got an A.
2007-09-04 16:51:04
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answer #3
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answered by Eyerish 5
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Yes. I had a high math SAT score and a middle of the road verbal score. I did really well in math and not so great in liberal arts classes.
Interestingly enough, when I took the GREs, my verbal score improved greatly. I also ended up taking 11 graduate courses in philosophy and did very well in them -- so my GRE scores correlated well with my GPA as well.
I later took the GMAT, got a high score & got a 3.8+ in my MBA classes.
2007-09-04 18:03:47
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answer #4
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answered by Ranto 7
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i replaced into interior the comparable boat as you in HS. i finished in 3 years, took training on the interior of reach scientific college, i replaced into interior the authentic 5 of my 220 human beings type yet did no longer accomplish that nicely on the SATs. I took my unhappiness and wrote a 2d very own fact approximately how my SATs scores did my intelligence and dedication no justice. It worked! I have been given into the only 2 authentic tier faculties I utilized to and replaced into admitted to the honors college with a scholarships at each college. i'm now one million year faraway from incomes my Doctorate in Optometry! save your head up intense! you will do actually high-quality and do not forget approximately taking the SATs better than as quickly as does not make you any much less eye-catching to universities, it purely shows which you're committed and can advance your scores (which happens ninety 9% of the time).
2016-10-09 23:40:29
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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I scored a 990 on my SAT.
I graduated from highschool with about a 3.0 at the top 5% of my class.
I graduated from college with a 3.652.
Don't think it directly correlated because I was more serious in college and gave it more effort.
2007-09-04 16:37:42
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answer #6
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answered by Bubbles 4
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It didn't correlate. But there is a big difference between taking a test in an otherwise stress-free time of life and class times when you are struggling with your own depression, a sense of failure, my co-dependentness, and a suicidal roommate that you can't help no matter how hard you try. Life situations factor big time into your grades. I now predict a large change in my grades this year (my roommate dropped out of school, leaving me with a lot less stress).
2007-09-04 17:06:54
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answer #7
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answered by Angeliss 5
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No. I did poorly on the SAT, but ended up with a 3.6 by the time I got a BA.
2007-09-04 16:38:49
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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yep. 1420 & 4.0 go together pretty well.
2007-09-04 17:06:45
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Nope, not even close.
2007-09-04 16:39:06
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answer #10
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answered by Chris 4
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