|
|||
08-26-2009, 08:42 PM
I don't think they still charged us....or if we had to pay at all....because I was like one of those cool little nerd kids that get the 'oppurtunity' to take it in the 7th grade....soooo I don't know.....I'd be mad if we had to pay $45 dollars....I could buy a set of fire poi for that much...>.>
|
|
||||
08-26-2009, 08:59 PM
Quote:
if this is nationwide some seniors get to use a waiver so that they can take the SAT for free >.>'' idk why..... but i never actually took advantage of that xDDD In the shadows beneath the trees he waits. In the darkness under the moon he plots In the silence of the night he kills. |
|
|||
08-26-2009, 09:13 PM
Quote:
Sounds like something you would've done xD |
|
||||
08-27-2009, 01:03 PM
Ok, my info is probably seriously outdated (I took the SAT in 1970!), but then the SAT was not required because you were in highschool. It was given in highschool because the majority of universities required it for admissions. Only a few state colleges accepted just the ACT. Back then the ACT had become almost the same thing as a PSAT, which was rare.
And yes, they charged us to take the SAT. Then it was a two part test, with an optional 3rd part. I took all three because I was worried about the math section dragging dwon my overall score. It worked - let's just say my language optional sections were high enough to make the mediocre (at best) score on the math section irrelevant. But after admission to your freshman year of college, those SAT scores were never looked at again. Only an open mind and open heart can be filled with life. ********************* Find your voice; silence will not protect you.
|
|
||||
08-29-2009, 01:49 AM
Quote:
|
Thread Tools | |
|
|