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Following four phenomenal hours, he completed the test.

Regardless, he couldn't lay considering the way that the outcomes


showed up in a split second on the screen: He scored in the 90th
percentile on the math bundle, and in the 95th percentile on the
verbal part. "With the target that proposes I'm in the 92nd
percentile?" he thought. His heart sank. Those scores wouldn't cut
it. Farewell, Stanford.

Notwithstanding, by at that point, as he looked nearer, he saw


something different: His general score was in the 98th percentile.
What? How was this conceivable?

It turns out most math-despised test-takers were shocking with


words, and the word-regarding ones couldn't really hack the
divisions. So while my companion's score wasn't the best in any
one locale, it was among the best when these parts were
considered in mix.

This is the manner in which wellness stacking works. It's less


troublesome and dynamically persuading to be in the top 10% in
several specific aptitudes — your "stack" — than it is to be in the
top 1% in any one limit. Research this diagram.

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