A student might leave the test feeling great— and then get a score way lower than expected. Also, a student might leave the test feeling awful about it— and might score much higher than expected.  This happens with every test administration; someone is always shocked when they receive their scores.

Each test administration is substantially different. As such, they have significantly different curves. On a recent  SAT, a student could have missed 15 math questions and score a 700. Conversely,  on the October 2018 SAT, a student could only miss 6 for that same score (data from CollegeBoard rubrics!).  On the August 2019 test, 7 questions missed resulted in a 600!

This kind of variation can make scores difficult to predict.  

This variation also exists for the ACT, especially among top scorers. Some ACTs allow students to miss a few (1 or 2) questions per section and still score a perfect 36.  However, on another test, you miss 2 questions and you’re down to a 33!

So when students wish for an “easy” test, what are they really asking for? Do they want a test that feels easy, but ends up having a nasty curve? Or do they want a test that feels hard, but ends up having a forgiving curve?

Obviously, there are pros and cons to each situation.  The best way to manage either scenario is to prepare for any possibility and do the best you can.

via streamlinetutors.com