In a few hours, our head tutor Marissa is conducting a live test prep strategies presentation, 5 Score-Killing SAT and ACT Prep Mistakes and How to Avoid Them.
The next ACT registration deadline is in four days (for the exam on 11/22), and the one for the SAT is later this month (see below).
Our next (guaranteed) ACT prep course starts tomorrow. Marissa will be offering a special discount coupon code on tonight's free workshop!
Here's where to sign up for tonight's class
Drop whatever you're doing if you have a young-un taking the SAT or ACT in the near future. Don't miss this class, who cares about the polling data, anyway!
I'm Andy Lockwood and i approve of this message, mostly.
Tutoring | Financial Aid Apps Prep
I want to tell you about our guaranteed SAT and ACT prep courses, but first, I'd like to address a commonly asked question:
Should My Kid Bother to Take the SAT or ACT?
Let me lay it out for you, because I seriously doubt you'll get this information from your guidance counselor or any other "expert."
60% of a college application is based on academic credentials:
*GPA
*Rigor of course load
*Standardized testing
(I'll cover the 40% some other time.)
If you take away one of the Big Three academic components, then the other two take on more weight. Simple logic.
So my first point is that there's a difference between applying test-optional and GETTING ACCEPTED test-optional. If your scores are too low to submit, AND your GPA and rigor is also lacking, you're not competitive and merely wasting your application fee.
What about the "High GPA, Bad Test Taker Phenomenon?"
Not that unusual, thanks in large part to rampant grade...
Tutoring | Financial Aid Consulting
Average ACT and SAT scores dropped in 2024 compared to 2023. What does this mean for 11th grade and younger kids who are headed to college?
1.4 million kids took the ACT in 2024, the average score: 19.4, down from 19.5 in 2023. Big whoop.
1.97 million kids took the SAT or PSAT in 2024, the average score: 1024, down from 1028 the previous year. Big whoop number two.
The party line among test professionals is not that our kids are dumber, but that more kids are taking the tests.
My hunch is the opposite, lower scores are part of the overall decline in education, achievement and accountability that keeps me up at night. A topic for another day, or never (publicly).
Let's turn to some specific advice for college-bound 11th graders and younger.
Prep hard and take the tests, either the SAT or ACT. Start before you're "ready," so you don't run out of time.
Take a diagnostic exam first, to determine...
Hidey ho,
I'm thigh-deep reviewing applications for Class of 2025 college applicants, and one question keeps coming up:
Should I submit my SAT or ACT scores?
The answer is a school-by-school, case-by-case, "it depends" kind of answer. Give me two minutes, and I'll show you exactly how to figure it out in this short video, using the University of South Carolina as an example (that you can follow for any test-optional college):
VIDEO: To Submit or Not to Submit
Have a great rest of your weekend!
-Andy "2 Minute Drill" Lockwood
P.S. Feel free to pass this along to anyone who could use this information.
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