<p>Let's take this scenario:</p>
<p>I give Math II and Physics in October and get 730 and 770.</p>
<p>I give Math II, again, and Chemistry in November and get 760 and 700.</p>
<p>Can I just send Math II 760 and Physics 770 to colleges?</p>
<p>Let's take this scenario:</p>
<p>I give Math II and Physics in October and get 730 and 770.</p>
<p>I give Math II, again, and Chemistry in November and get 760 and 700.</p>
<p>Can I just send Math II 760 and Physics 770 to colleges?</p>
<p>urgent 10char</p>
<p>For colleges that require SAT IIs you can do that unless the college requires you to send all scores, which some do.</p>
<p>ya i have the same question.</p>
<p>can I pick and choose which subjects from different dates and send ONLY those, if the schools don’t require all scores?
because I took 3 tests on one date, one of them i just took for the heck of it because I was curious to see how I’d do, and I don’t want to submit that score because I don’t think it’s a good representation of my ability.
and I signed up for three more.
ok here’s an example</p>
<p>DATE 1
Tests: A, B, C,</p>
<p>DATE 2
Tests: D, E, F,</p>
<p>can i submit A, B and E? without submitting C,D & F?</p>
<p>buuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuump.</p>
<p>i would really like to know aswell</p>
<p>It is my impression that you can select individual SAT Subject Tests to send to colleges, unless of course as someone already noted an individual college requires you to send all three. So, yes, you can send A, B & E without submitting C, D & F. Only with the Subject Tests, of course. They’re seen as individual tests while the sections on the SAT Reasoning are seen as what they aresections of a single test, which is why you can’t send those individual ones in. I wish they had kept Writing as a separate subject test. I would be in such a better position!</p>
<p>^ This is my understanding of the issue as well. I’ve seen it mentioned on this site that schools like Stanford, which require all SAT Reasoning Test/ACT scores, actually prefer that you only send your best Subject Test scores. Of course, Stanford doesn’t require Subject Tests in the first place, but I think you get the idea.</p>