<p>Will ANYONE see if I cancel my SAT score for March?</p>
<p>I am considering doing so, and if colleges see that I canceled, I prefer for them to just see a bad score.</p>
<p>Will ANYONE see if I cancel my SAT score for March?</p>
<p>I am considering doing so, and if colleges see that I canceled, I prefer for them to just see a bad score.</p>
<p>typo in thread title…
canceling*
blah
not a good day lol</p>
<p>Don’t cancel! You probably did better than you think…</p>
<p>it doesn’t really matter. There’s only two SAT score-use policy: superscore or taking account of your SAT scores; the two SAT score-use policy depends on the college. So, if this is your second time and you think you did worse, and you’re planning to go to a college whose score-use policy is the latter, canceling would be a wise decision. If the college does the superscore policy, you might as well take the risk to see what your March score is.</p>
<p>Besides, I think you should not cancel your score and see how you did so that you know what to improve on.</p>
<p>I bombed the math test (as in most likely less than 400). </p>
<p>This is my first time taking it. Let’s say I got like a 1500 and then really prepared for October and got like a 2000. Wouldn’t that look really bad?</p>
<p>i wouldnt see that being bad, if anything it might be viewed as good. Secondly, if you jump that high they might think you had a bad day or you were sick</p>
<p>huge jump = great improvement. college will see that.</p>
<p>would it be worth canceling if my superscore could go up about 40-50points maybe (or be unaffected) BUT one section went down 100 points? the colleges i am looking at do not take score choice. So basically my score for the day would go down (one section by a lot) and other two sections might go up a little bit but might not. Is it worth the risk?</p>