<p>The max. you can take in one day is 3, and you can take them over two days, just not consecutive days. you could do 2 and then the other 2 in a month or so.</p>
<p>Oh i didnt know that.
So is it possible that i give phy, chem and maths this oct and World History in december ? (giving sat 1 in nov)
PS: can you think of any other better combination with four subs?</p>
<p>do whichever 4 you think you will do best on, feel most comfortable with, have to spend the least time on. But that is a good combination.</p>
<p>Will it have a negative impact on my admission process if there is a two month gap between my subject tests?</p>
<p>It doesn’t matter at all (that I know, I’m just going on instinct here). It just matters how well you do on them. some people at my school for example took Biology after sophmore year and took Chemistry and others after junior year.</p>
<p>I did this in June. Honestly it wasn’t too bad at all. By the second one I had a slight headache, but it didn’t phase me too much lol</p>
<p>I started out easy just to make sure I could do great on my easiest subjects to the best of my ability while I was still energized:
U.S. History
Biology
Literature
I think it might help if you break em up like this. To me, it wouldn’t make a lot of sense to take USH and then Lit. Bio is completely different so just space them out. Idk if that made any sense :]</p>
<p>Anyways, it’s definitely possible. Just make sure you get up and walk during the five minute breaks. It definitely helps! After my 2nd one, I went to get a drink of water, came back, sat down, and was ready to go. Mind you, I didn’t bring any snacks or anything, I completely forgot lol</p>
<p>I did Maths->Phy->Chem :)</p>
<p>Should I do tests by subject type (e.g. Math/Bio/Chem and Lit/USH/WH) or by how hard they are (e.g. Math/Lit/USH and Bio/Chem/WH)?</p>
<p>I did that and my scores deproved throughout the sitting lol. It could be because I got tired after taking the first two tests that I did not do as well as I would have hoped for in chem.</p>
<p>You should try to take 1 at a time if you can…I couldnt because Im applying next year and I hadnt taken any SAT II tests and it was May (and I needed to save June for SAT and October for possible retake)</p>
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<p>Sorry for being nitpicky but since this is the SAT forum, let me point out that it is faze(d) not phase(d).</p>
<p>Hope you stay unfazed :)</p>
<p>Took 3 tests in one sitting, scored a perfect 2400, and still felt alright after the test. I guess I was conditioned as I had to sit through 3 hr math test in one sitting in my junior college.</p>
<p>I took math first but I got distracted because someone’s phone went off and then the proctor started threatening to cancel the test and telling the person’s who phone went off to “reveal” themselves (which of course they didn’t). </p>
<p>But you should always do the math first because you don’t want to do that after something like US History since the reading for US History is so tiring. You want to be sharp and on top of things.</p>
<p>I took literature last and bombed it. I should’ve taken just Math 2 and US History and left but I just had to take literature to see what would happen. But I was too tired and gave up on it.</p>
<p>i would say that when u do practice tests, try them in one sitting, so u will get used to the workload and wont be overwhelmed like i was</p>
<p>^^Which are the most “exhausting” and draining Subject Tests besides USH, then?</p>
<p>It just depends on the order you take them. Take the one that requires the most focus first (the most time intensive). I did Math II, U.S., then Spanish. I did Spanish last because I felt that I could not really study for it (I am comfortable with all the grammar and have a pretty good vocabulary). I think this went very well, I will get my scores this week.</p>