Travis Cabe
New Member
Furthermore, the three tests were in different mental situations.  The first test I took, we were in the car on a road trip with friends.  Both of us in the back seat, she used the timer on her iPhone as I completed the questions (music and conversation around me).  The second test was after a 16-hour shift on Valentine's day (I'm a chef, it was a LONG day, both physically and mentally).  I wanted to test my aptitude after having an extremely long and stressful day (Wife timed me on this one too).  The final test I took a couple days ago after a full night's sleep, breakfast, and light exercise.  I was hoping to simulate the situation that I will actually be in when I test (I timed myself on this one).  The pressure will not get to me, I test very well.  I learned at an early age, especially for aptitude tests like this and the SAT, etc., that either you know it or you don't, and have never really stressed over them.  I took the SAT on a Saturday after partying on Friday night and getting only 5 hours of sleep, and got a 1280.  
 
I know the individual scores on these tests were good. I looked at that bell-curve, I know the scores were at the extreme upper-end. My GPA is not what you would consider competitive, and I know that a good score, especially say in the 95th percentile or better, along with my other strengths, MAY be able to out-weigh my low GPA.
 
The point here is, I want to know if I'm scoring it SOMEWHAT near how the actual test will be scored. Are certain sections weighted more?
				
			I know the individual scores on these tests were good. I looked at that bell-curve, I know the scores were at the extreme upper-end. My GPA is not what you would consider competitive, and I know that a good score, especially say in the 95th percentile or better, along with my other strengths, MAY be able to out-weigh my low GPA.
The point here is, I want to know if I'm scoring it SOMEWHAT near how the actual test will be scored. Are certain sections weighted more?
	
.