Can we start an official list of colleges, which superscore the ACT?

<p>UPDATED LIST:</p>

<p>Amherst
Boston College
Brown University
Columbia University
Cornell University
Duke University
Georgetown University
Florida State University
Kenyon College
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
New York University
Purdue University
Olin College of Engineering
St. John's University
Trinity College
SUNY Buffalo
University of Arkansas
University of Georgia
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
University of Tennesse
Washington University in St. Louis</p>

<p>ADD MORE</p>

<p>You've gotta be kidding me, Duke does superscore? I never thought universities superscored the ACT. I mean I knew some did but not the good ones like Wash. U, Duke, and Brown university.</p>

<p>Wow, I never knew that many highly-selective universities superscored the ACT. Good news! =)</p>

<p>^Unless it's somewhere in this thread, I want to see some proof, links, etc.</p>

<p>I got all the names from this thread itself.
Therefore, no hardcore proof.</p>

<p>Stanford does</p>

<p>Stanford doesn't. Met with an admissions officer today. They simply take the highest composite score you send them.</p>

<p>MIT

[quote]
While we do require the SAT Reasoning Test or ACT Plus Writing, we realize that some of you may also have taken older versions of these tests. In such circumstances, we will consider scores from each section of both the older and newer versions of the tests and use the highest score achieved in each section for our evaluation. This is also the case if you have taken the SAT Reasoning Test or ACT Plus Writing more than once. Since reporting multiple scores will not hurt you, we recommend that when you register to take tests, you ask for all of your scores to be reported to MIT.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>MIT</a> Admissions: Standardized Test Requirements</p>

<p>Columbia University: NO</p>

<p>
[quote]
You may alternatively take the ACT Assessment, graded on a 36-point scale; if you take the test more than once, you will be evaluated on the highest composite score you receive.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Columbia</a> University Office of Undergraduate Admissions - First Year Admission</p>

<p>NYU: It's kind of vague. It could mean either way.</p>

<p>
[quote]
We will use your highest combined SAT scores or your highest ACT scores in evaluating your application.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>NYU</a> > Undergraduate Admissions > Applying for Admission > Freshman Applicants > Standardized Tests</p>

<p>Georgetown does not.</p>

<p>
[quote]
Georgetown accepts the ACT in lieu of the SAT. Applicants who take the ACT more than once will have their highest composite score considered in the evaluation process.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Georgetown</a> University- Office of Undergraduate Admissions</p>

<p>Boston College: Considers all scores (very vague).</p>

<p>
[quote]
All standardized tests are used for evaluation in the admission process and applicants are required to submit all standardized examinations by the required application deadline

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Frequently</a> Asked Questions - Boston College</p>

<p>Those are the only ones I looked up. So new list after looking those up.</p>

<p>Amherst
Boston College - Considers all scores.
Brown University
Cornell University
Duke University
Florida State University
Kenyon College
Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Vague
New York University - Vague. Leans toward superscoring.
Purdue University
Olin College of Engineering
St. John's University
Trinity College
SUNY Buffalo
University of Arkansas
University of Georgia
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
University of Tennesse
Washington University in St. Louis</p>

<p>i know hopkins superscore</p>

<p>"considers all score?" hahahahaha </p>

<p>eeewwww why don't they just take the superscored for everything
GOD</p>

<p>10 characters</p>

<p>Has anyone confirmed brown? i've checked their website... nothing there...</p>

<p>^Nope. They (brown) dont. Confirmed. </p>

<p>
[quote]
In response to your question, we do not "superscore" the ACT. What we are most interested in is the composite score and the separate writing score.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>damn. people need to stop getting my hopes up )= does anyone know Duke for sure?</p>

<p>bump! thank you</p>