Good or bad... Good or bad... Try AMAZING!; and in 7th grade! You're on your way!
Why did you take your SAT if your in 7th grade?????????????
Well the top score you can get is 2400 but you are in 8th grade like me, and got a 1630 its o.k. I got a 1980 because im a beast at the core subjects. Foshizzle homie.
nooooo!! that's SO good for a 7th grader! imagine how good you'll do 11th and 12th grade
I took the SAT in 7th grade through the Duke Talent Identification Program, but I'm not sure how you can take the PSAT.
for a 7th grade? nooooo that's pretty good!! I'm a senior and i got around 1460. take it again in a few years definitely
Yes
no. it is the worst grade
While Peter sat at home completing his seventh-grade homework, his mum and dad attended a political caucus in support of their politics.
Yuup. Best of luck.
Then you do real good in collage!
There is no exactly right time to start SAT tutoring and not all students need SAT tutoring. The earliest point that I am aware of when many students start SAT tutoring is in the seventh grade, when above-average students may take the SAT as part of the Duke Talent Identification Program. Here is a URL where you can read about the Duke Talent Identification Program. http://www.tip.duke.edu/talent_searches/grade_7/ To participate in this program, you take the Duke qualifying test at your school and, if you do reasonably well on it, you are allowed to take the SAT in the seventh grade. At my middle school, a lot of students qualified to take the SAT in the seventh grade and the school offered an after-school tutoring program to help us get ready for the SAT. I also worked with my Mom a lot to get ready for the vocabulary test on the SAT. I did well on the SAT in the seventh grade and that gave me a lot of confidence when I faced it again in high school. If a student is already past the seventh grade, then a good time to start SAT practice (or tutoring for those that need it) is the summer before the junior year. Intensive SAT practice at this point will help a student perform well on the PSAT, a mini-SAT administered in the fall of the student's junior year. A student who performs extremely well on the PSAT (scoring in the top one-half of one percent of PSAT test takers in the student's state) will be named a National Merit Semi-Finalist. Well over 90% of semi-finalists progress to National Merit Finalist, at which point they become eligible for many scholarships to various public universities and also to some private colleges. Students already in their junior year who have not yet started to prepare for the SAT should do so immediately. If the student does well on SAT practice tests, it is a good idea to take the SAT no later than January of the junior year. Students who do very well on the SAT at this time won't have to take it again and can concentrate on SAT Subject Tests and AP exams. Students who need to retake the SAT (as most students do) will benefit from having already gone through the experience of taking it in their junior year. Students who finish their junior year and still haven't started SAT preparation should undertake serious SAT preparation during the summer before their senior years. The College Board (which administers the SAT) offers a four-month subscription to its online SAT course for $69.95. This may be all the tutoring that some students need to prepare for the SAT. Of course, for those who can afford it, private SAT tutoring will undoubtedly improve scores in some cases. However, there are good and bad SAT tutors and SAT tutoring does not guarantee a better score. I found that taking SAT practice tests (available through the College Board) was one of the best ways to get ready for the SAT.
The minimum SAT score on the New SAT is 600 (200 in each section).
For a 7th grader, 500 in one section is a great score, seeing as you probably are unfamiliar with the material.