<p>Since you can only submit one test day at a time you obvioulsy submit your highest score. I have two of the same score. Except one testing it was most lopsided as in very high english score and low sciene score. 9 pt difference. The one I just took, all my numbers are relatively high and in the same range. Is it better to submit this one?</p>
<p>Submit both, many schools will take your highest subscores
from different settings. At my son's school, we were advised to send his ACT scores in lieu of his SATIIs as these subscores were better</p>
<p>most schools do no subscore</p>
<p>My son had the same dilemma. On test #1 he had a 36 in Reading and 28 in Science. The other scores were 32 for a composite of 32. On test #2 he had a composite of 34 with a Science and Math subscores of 35 and Reading and English at 33. He wants to be a science major so he really wanted to send the higher Science score. On the other hand, he wanted them to see the perfect reading score on Test #1 but didn't want them to see the science score on that one. He ended up only sending #2 because of the higher composite.</p>
<p>I think that you are probably better off sending the balanced score rather than the lopsided one.</p>
<p>I'm sort of in the same boat. I have the test from June with a 35E 32M 36R 35S, where I messed up math thanks to around two hours of sleep the night prior (I only remembered I was taking the test the day before, and I'd been going to bed around 3 to 4 AM during the summer.) My October test was 36E 35M 35R 32S. Both of these are 35 composites. I'm sending both because I'm certainly not math-challenged in comparison to my other abilities, nor am I scientifically inept.</p>
<p>Thanks for the responses.</p>
<p>Both of my composites are identicle.</p>
<p>I'm not sure what to do yet. One school suggested I just send both. This seems like a good idea but it would get really expensive. </p>
<p>Anyone else in a similar situation?</p>