Frank's MCAT score: 12, 12, Q, 12. This is very very good. This is better than very good. This is probable admission to medical school. The Q is his score on the writing sample: the range is from J (weakest) to T (strongest).
Emma's SAT IIIs are very good. I can't remember the numbers, but they're all good.
Emma's first band review went really well.
Brag brag brag. The kids are all right.
I still have another foot of kelpy thing to do, a job or two to apply to, grout to apply, and then -- write write write write.
Emma's SAT IIIs are very good. I can't remember the numbers, but they're all good.
Emma's first band review went really well.
Brag brag brag. The kids are all right.
I still have another foot of kelpy thing to do, a job or two to apply to, grout to apply, and then -- write write write write.
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Theoretically, you could get 15,15,T,15 (bio sciences, verbal reasoning, physical sciences). But nobody does. Actually, Frank's aggregate percentile ranking is significantly higher than any one test, which I think means he is a well-rounded young man.
I think they deliberately mark the writing samples with weird letters because they don't want anybody to think in terms of a conventional score or grade. Which they do anyway: they immediately look at the charts and say "Hmm, Q is like an 85th percentile." At least Frank did.
All very bizarrre, but he's happy, I'm happy, the nice fellow is happy, and we're less worried about next year.
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