College Admissions Prep: SAT

The SAT is an admissions test that measures critical reading, mathematical reasoning, and writing skills. The SAT lasts 3 hours and 45 minutes. In the U.S., the SAT is administered on 7 national test dates, in October, November, December, January, March/April, May, and June. See http://www.collegeboard.com for registration information.

Colleges and universities use the SAT as one measure among others—class rank, high school GPA, extracurricular activities, personal essays, and teacher recommendations—of a student's readiness to do college-level work. SAT scores are compared with the scores of other applicants and the accepted scores at an institution; scores can also be used as a basis for awarding scholarships and merit-based financial aid.

PLEASE NOTE: The current format of the SAT was administered for the first time March 2005. Before March, the SAT was administered in a format including only two sections: math and verbal.

 

Test Format

Section Time Number of Questions Content Covered
Writing Essay: 25 minutes
Multiple Choice: 35 minutes (one 25-minute section and one 10-minute section)
1 essay question
49 multiple-choice questions:
  • 25 improving sentences
  • 18 identifying sentence errors
  • 6 improving paragraphs
  • ability to organize, express, and develop ideas
  • grammar, usage, diction, sentence structure, idiomatic expressions
Critical Reading 70 minutes (two 25-minute sections and one 20-minute section) 67 multiple-choice questions:
  • 19 sentence completions
  • 48 reading comprehension
  • vocabulary knowledge and understanding meaning in context
  • literal and inferential reading comprehension
Math 70 minutes (two 25-minute sections and one 20-minute section) 54 questions:
  • 44 multiple-choice
  • 10 grid-in (student-produced response)
  • numbers and operations
  • algebra and functions
  • plane and coordinate geometry
  • statistics, probability, and data analysis
Variable
(Experimental Section: not factored into student’s final score)
20 or 25 minutes varies varies

The three sections-Writing, Critical Reading, and Math-are each graded on a scale from 200–800, making a perfect score 2400. The essay is graded on a scale from 2–12 and comprises 25% of the total Writing score. The SAT penalizes students for guessing: for every wrong response to a question with multiple-choice answers a student loses 1/4 of a point. No points are deducted for wrong answers to student-produced response questions.

Please note that the SAT does not offer score choice, which means that if a student submits one of her or his SAT scores to colleges, those colleges see all of that student's scores.

Return to SAT and ACT overview

Our Results

Over the years, our students have gained on average:

SAT   

 386 points of 2400 total

ACT

 5.4 points of 36 total

Read what our students and parents are saying!