I think that different applicants are held to a different standard in terms of how many test scores can be submitted without it being a negative. I don’t mean to stir the hornet’s nest but I think recruited athletes can basically submit as many scores as they wish and not have this held against them. ORM applicants however…probably not.
@arsenalozil - Why do you think that is true? Did anyone say it to you?
Yeah, that’s a baseless supposition.
FWIW I’ve never ever heard an admissions officer say they are at all impressed by a high single sitting score.
@mathmom - in the Amherst admissions video floating around, an adcom says sth to that effect, but yeah, I have a ton of experience suggesting that number of sittings is irrelevant (or negligible at best).
Nswer trending
http://mcc.gse.harvard.edu/files/gse-mcc/files/20160120_mcc_ttt_execsummary_interactive.pdf
Since there is a policy against posting links to a blog —
Google “Complete List of Colleges That Require All SAT Scores”
Prep scholars has a table listing the schools that want all test scores. There are almost 125 of them.
Many of which are out of date. Alternatively, one can look at a pinned thread on College Confidential:
http://talk.qa.collegeconfidential.com/sat-act-tests-test-preparation/1912440-must-you-submit-all-sat-act-or-sat-subject-test-scores.html#latest
As always, verify with the college that the information is up-to-date.
^^ Except that list isn’t up-to-date. So verify with the school to confirm.
My sophomore will take the SAT for the first time in June. Two reasons: one, his fall is crazy, crazy busy with marching band; two, he is taking pre-calc now and the SAT doesn’t test on Calc so this year is closer to the level of math the SAT tests. Also three, if he does well we are done with this which would be really cool.