Collegeboard's TEST SELECTION for money?

<p>How much more money will Collegeboard get once March 2009 comes around and students can start choosing which score reports to send? Nothing better to do at 8 AM on a Saturday than try your luck on 3 subject tests and see if you get lucky with one of them, or take the reasoning test like 10 times in high school, and send the 3 with the highest sub scores. You can expect no smart student would blindly take some test knowing if he does bad, colleges will see it and it will hurt him in some sort of way.</p>

<p>I think students will treat it as unlimited knowing nothing can possibly go wrong, and average scores around the nation(superscored) will rise substantially. I know money for the student will be an issue, but scholarships from that high score can make up for it. You might just see students take every SAT possible, trying just about every subject test to make themselves look great to colleges. That means millions more(maybe even $100 million a year) for Collegeboard. You think that's why they did it?</p>

<p>YES! And it does not benefit college admissions anyway, because many people will have higher scores making it necessary to have an almost perfect score to even be competitive!</p>

<p>I feel that there is going to be some implied advantage that colleges will make if you send all your scores. Will they be able to tell if you didn't send them all? The difference between my ACT score and SAT score was almost 100 points and the admissions person is still telling me"SEND ALL YOUR SCORES!". I think they're a little annoyed if people only send ACT scores because they know that almost everyone takes the SAT, and this just ruins it for them.</p>