PSAT and its Importance
Preliminary SAT (PSAT) aka National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (NMSQT) is a standardized test that is administered by the college board. Unlike SAT and ACT, this test is offered only once a year. The expected date for the 2024 PSAT is to be announced with two alternate test dates within October.
More than 3.5 million students appear for PSAT each year. And this number is growing rapidly year after year. These scores are used to check the qualification for the National Merit Scholarship program.
Why take PSAT
How to prepare for the PSAT
PSAT scores are released within three months of the test date, in the second week of January. Your score card includes overall scores which ranges from 320-1520.
To summarize, we can say PSAT gives an indication of how a student would perform on SAT/ACT with this level of preparation. This gives an idea to parents and students, about the level of preparation that is required further. With all said and done, students must remember that the PSAT is much shorter than the SAT. Also, questions given on the PSAT are easier than the ACT/SAT. PSAT kind of gives a glimpse of real test taking conditions. Of course, great scores on PSAT would fetch you a national merit scholarship.
For more information about PSAT, you may visit your school counsellor or visit https://collegereadiness.collegeboard.org/psat-nmsqt-psat-10
The PSAT/NMSQT takes 2 hours and 14 minutes and consists of 2 sections:
(1) the Reading and Writing Section, 64 minutes 54 Questions and
(2) the Math Section, 70 minutes 44 Questions
Most of the questions are multiple-choice, though some math questions ask you to write in the answer rather than select it.