The SAT is a standardized
test for college admissions
in the United States. The
SAT is administered by the
Educational Testing Service
(ETS) in the United States
and is developed, published,
and scored by the College
Board.
In the early 1990s, the SAT
consisted of six sections:
Two math sections (scored
together on a 200-800 scale),
two verbal sections (scored
together on a 200-800 scale),
the Test of Standard Written
English (scored on a 20-60+
scale), and an equating section.
In 1994, the exam was modified,
removing antonym questions,
and adding math questions
that were not multiple choice.
The average score on the 1994
modification of the SAT I
was usually around 1000 (500
on the verbal, 500 on the
math). The most selective
schools in the United States
(for example, those in the
Ivy League) typically had
SAT averages exceeding 1400
on the old test.
Beginning with the March
12, 2005 administration of
the exam, the SAT Reasoning
Test was modified and lengthened.
Changes included the removal
of analogy questions from
the Critical Reading (formerly
Verbal) section and quantitative
comparisons from the Math
section, and the inclusion
of a writing section (with
an essay) based on the former
SAT II Writing Subject Test.
The Mathematics section was
expanded to cover three years
of high school mathematics.
Getting start to prepare
for the SAT (Scholastic Assessment
Test) can be intimidating.
Our goal is to make the first
step as easy for you as possible.
To perform well on the SAT,
you need to draw on a set
of skills. The SAT is an important
test. It's different from
the tests that you're used
to taking. On explicitly stated
purpose of the SAT is to predict
how students will perform
academically as college freshmen.
But the more practical purpose
of the SAT is to help college
admissions officers make acceptance
decisions, because it provides
a single, standardized means
of comparison. The SAT is
a predictable test and can
be well prepared through practice.