Florida student, 17, gets a PERFECT score on his SATs

A Florida teenager has achieved the virtually impossible by earning a perfect score of 1600 on his SATs.

Jacob Harrison, 17, surpassed his goal of 1550 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT I) exam that covers reading, writing and arithmetic when he took it in December.

'I was shocked, I showed my friend because I was walking to school,' the junior at Largo High School in Largo, Florida told FOX13 on Tuesday. 'We both kind of freaked out for a second and then ran to class.'

News of Harrison's perfect performance comes as cases proceeds against 50 people implicated in a widespread college admissions bribery scam, which included cheating on the SAT. 

Scroll down for video

Florida high school junior Jacob Harrison, 17 (pictured), has achieved the virtually impossible by earning a perfect score of 1600 on his SATs

Florida high school junior Jacob Harrison, 17 (pictured), has achieved the virtually impossible by earning a perfect score of 1600 on his SATs

The SAT I is made up of two sections, divided between  Evidence-Based Reading and Writing, and Math. 

The reading and writing section is further separated into two portions with one focused on reading and the other dealing exclusively with writing and language.

Harrison didn't answer a single question incorrectly in either section, on any of those three portions. 

The SAT I also includes an optional Essay portion, though it's not clear whether Harrison completed that part.

In 2018, less than one percent of the 2.1 million people who took the SAT exam walked away with a score between 1400 and 1600, according to College Board

In 2018, less than one percent of the 2.1 million people who took the SAT exam walked away with a score between 1400 and 1600, according to College Board

Scoring 1600 on the SATs is no east feat. In 2018, less than one percent of the 2.1 million people who

read more from dailymail.....

PREV Biden, 81, forgets the date of January 6 riots at glitzy Westchester fundraiser ... trends now
NEXT Four things that could change RIGHT NOW to save the lives of Aussie women from ... trends now