Breaking News: PSAT scores will be released tomorrow, Dec. 7

Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test PSAT scores will be released tomorrow, Dec. 7, for sophomores and juniors after a year without the test due to COVID-19. 

Physical score reports will be distributed by teachers during WIN time. If a student is absent tomorrow, they can get their scores during Advisory on Thursday.

The scores will range from 320 to 1520 — the average being about 920 and 1010 for sophomores and juniors, respectively. 

Though the cutoff score for Kansas National Merit Semifinalists has not been released yet, in 2020, it was an overall score of 1440.

One response to “Breaking News: PSAT scores will be released tomorrow, Dec. 7”

  1. HOW I RESTORED MY STOLEN BITCOIN WITH THE HELP OF THE HACK ANGELS RECOVERY AGENCY.

    I want to share my incredible experience with THE HACK ANGELS RECOVERY AGENCY. It’s really a testimony for me. I found myself in such a predicament not too long ago, having invested a significant amount of money in what I believed to be a promising platform, only to discover it was nothing more than a fraudulent scheme. I was defrauded of $1.6 million in Bitcoins. I learnt my lesson. I made every attempt to get my money back from them, but with no success. Eventually, a buddy who had gone through a similar situation suggested THE HACK ANGELS RECOVERY AGENCY. A recovery AGENCY. I got in touch with them via

    WhatsApp +1(520)200-2320 ) or shoot them an Email at (support@thehackangels.com) They also have a great Website at (www.thehackangels.com )

    And with their technical expertise. they were able to easily retrieve all of the money that had been stolen. I heartily suggest them to anyone experiencing a similar situation. They focus on individualized care and transparent communication, ensuring client support throughout the process.

Leave a Reply

Author Spotlight

Katie Murphy

Katie Murphy
As Print Co-Editor-In-Chief, senior Katie Murphy is addicted to distributing fresh issues every other week, even when it means covering her hands — and sometimes clothes — in rubbed-off ink. She keeps an emergency stack of papers from her three years on staff in both her bedroom and car. Between 2 a.m. deadline nights, Katie "plays tennis" and "does math" (code for daydreaming about the perfect story angle and font kerning). Only two things scare her: Oxford commas and the number of Tate's Disney vacations. »

Our Latest Issue