<p>sat 2 scores were between 600-700</p>
<p>I have a different house and have put my middle name in my forename and have a different email address.</p>
<p>Will it work?</p>
<p>Should I do it</p>
<p>sat 2 scores were between 600-700</p>
<p>I have a different house and have put my middle name in my forename and have a different email address.</p>
<p>Will it work?</p>
<p>Should I do it</p>
<p>Your SSN and school among others are still the same?</p>
<p>@viphan
International student so no ssn
School = Home schooled, not listed.</p>
<p>@viphan I have got to the next stage telling me to enter all the EC’s but with score choice idk.</p>
<p>I’m only applying to reach schools, but I don’t want this to be an issue later on, I could probably get away with it for doing the tests now but wouldn’t I have to declare my main address when applying?</p>
<p>@vipham Thank you for your reply.</p>
<p>It would be harder for CB to notice the discrepancies, and I would NOT recommend playing cheap. What you do is your business, but know that there may be consequences later on. </p>
<p>@viphan Can I inbox you please, I am an int app so not really familiar with CB.</p>
<p>I need to book the tests to do soon.</p>
<p>Thanks to the good help and advice from @viphan I have decided to do it honestly, and use my original account.</p>
<p>Better to be honest then be dishonest now and get caught later on.</p>
<p>Thank you viphan.</p>
<p>@fnaticMSiNate: Flagrant dishonesty is ALWAYS a horrible idea and, in this case, you considered blatant academic freud, which could easily terminate any opportunity you have for advanced/higher education and might also result in criminal prosecution. Unquestionably, it was a simply TERRIBLE idea, whether or not you were ever caught and penalized. However, and even more important, perhaps it’s time for you seriously to assess your ethics, values, and principles. Having such duplicitous – perhaps even criminal – ideas in your teens certainly suggests that you could be headed for very serious difficulties as an adult. Therefore, I urge you to consider if any minor, temporary advantages potentially obtained through deceitful and possibly criminal behavior are worth the likely costs and risks – especially your loss of self-respect. I am glad you decided not to do this, but the fact that you even considered it should be a real warning. </p>
<p>@TopTier Thanks for your reply but I completely disagree. How is it criminal? When you go off and have your interviews with the alums is the first thing you are going to say is that I retook the SAT x amount of times (if you retook whatever, idk). You wouldn’t dump all your bad stuff on them either. If I come off that I am rude then that is not my intention. What I was considering before was so minor anyway, what about all the preppy millionaires who pay clever students to give their papers - that’s cheating at least what I was considering to do was not cheating at all.</p>
<p>Not that I have changed my mind, ‘viphan’ gave me good advice, but what would the future ramifications be - discarded from scholarships, rejected from schools?</p>
<p>Anyway thanks for your reply, good luck into getting into your schools.</p>
<p>Academic Fraud is not the road to success…All I’m going to say on the matter.</p>
<p>@SvFalcon74 I am not condoning it nor partaking in it.</p>
<p>@fnaticMSiNate: It is potentially criminal because felonious fraud is generally defined as: “intentional perversion of truth in order to induce another to part with something of value or to surrender a legal right.” If you were to provide one or more universities with a second set of SAT scores – knowingly utilizing false identification information to conceal earlier, less favorable SAT results – you would clearly be employing deceit to obtain something of value (university admission). This is precisely what you initially proposed.</p>
<p>I am very glad you have opted not to do so, however, not everyone who posts CC is a teenage secondary school student. Some of us are parents and grandparents, with multiple university degrees, and with extensive professional experiences. You may not fully understand the highly adverse and enduring implications of what you originally suggested, but that obviously does not alter how either the academic community or law enforcement might understandably perceive it.</p>
<p>It is fraud to submit dishonest application omitting all your scores. It an subject you to expulsion and your diploma if you got that far, would be revoked at any time in the future. Taking financial aid with a fraudulent application puts it into subject to criminal prosecution. </p>
<p>Most schools would allow score choice on subject test. It is not that important how much you score previously. It matters what is your score now. Spend your time on how to improve this score than doing this kind of thing.</p>
<p>@BrownParent: I entirely agree with you and I additionally believe that – with or without financial assistance – OP’s initial suggestion may well be a crime because college admission is clearly something of significant value. Fundamentally, however, that would ultimately be is a question for a jury (and for a prosecutor). </p>
<p>To illustrate specifically, OP’s original proposal likely meets the Common Law definition of fraud: x duplicitously is accepted by university y through the submission of intentionally deceitful SAT results, thereby denying z – who is a more-qualified and -deserving applicant – a place in y’s freshman class. Therefore, z has been wrongfully refused something of value (matriculation at university y) through x’s deliberate untruthfulness. </p>
<p>I understand that the “value” of a place in a university’s freshman class is much more difficult to calculate than, for example, the market price of a new BMW. However, it unquestionably is very valuable. Were it not, parents and children would never devote such substantial efforts and capital to gain admission to universities of Brown’s and Duke’s stature.
</p>
<p>Thank you all for your advice. Still whether what was originally suggested in the OP, I don’t condone it. Not worth it</p>
<p>@billcsho </p>
<p>Hey may I ask what universites accept score choice - any of the ivies + stanford and MIT.</p>
<p>And finally will financial aid be able to see my retakes.</p>
<p>Kind Regards.</p>
<p>If you want to know about score choice policies, download this document:</p>
<p><a href=“https://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/sat-score-use-practices-list.pdf”>https://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/sat-score-use-practices-list.pdf</a></p>
<p>What the OP suggests is absolutely academic dishonesty. It’s intentional and the OP knows it’s wrong. To the OP: do not do it.</p>