<p>"College of William and Mary has indicated that it considers your highest section scores across all SAT test dates that you submit. Only your highest section scores will be considered as part of the final admissions decision. Each time you submit scores, College of William and Mary will update your record with any new high scores.</p>
<p>College of William and Mary strongly encourages you to submit your scores each time you take the SAT. Sending your scores each time you take the SAT can benefit you by allowing College of William and Mary to consider you for all available enrollment-related opportunities"</p>
<p>does that mean i need to superscore by myself on collegeboard OR WILL DOES THE COLLEGE WANT MY SECTIONS whole test seating? </p>
<p>does the college superscore by themselves??//</p>
<p>Lol, how can you superscore yourself on collegeboard? You’ll have to submit your SAT scores from all the single sittings in which there is a section that you want the college to consider.</p>
<p>They’re saying they will superscore you themselves. They’re simply encouraging their applicants to give them as much information as they can – i.e., submit your scores for every single time you took the SAT. To encourage their applicants to give them what they want (all the scores for all the SATs you’ve taken), they’re “assuring you” that they WILL superscore, so “not to worry.” Most colleges that we’ve come across in the past several years encourage this same thing and offer to superscore.</p>
<p>^So you’re implying that colleges judge applicants based on all the scores received, not just the highest scores, even when they explicitly state that they “superscore” and only consider the highest?</p>
<p>^Depends on whether you are a trusting person or a skeptic. Consider: Why is that a number of colleges that profess they will consider only your highest scores reject score choice and require that you send all scores? If you think about that one for a while it may turn you into a skeptic.</p>
<p>@xrCalico23,
I wasn’t really implying that. I was just answering OP’s question.</p>
<p>I do happen to believe that, all other things being equal, college admissions would find a single 780 780 780 more impressive than 3 different SATs that can be superscored to 780 780 780, for example. But they do say that they’ll superscore and only consider the highest, meaning, I guess, that both scenarios would be considered equal in admission’s eyes. I only meant to explain what OP’s college website meant. Nothing more.</p>
<p>@SimpleLife
Oh no, I was just curious as to what you thought of whole score choice/ superscore issue, because you seemed to be a little skeptical of it. I just wanted to hear your opinion about it, nothing more:)</p>