<p>I signed up for bio and lit, but decided that I dont want to do lit. Is there any way to cancel my registration for the lit test only?</p>
<p>I think there is, but you won’t get your money back.</p>
<p>So i registered for bio but i want to give physics instead. It doesn’t matter what your admission ticket says right? I’m just being extra cautious because for SATs the test supervisors were particularly rude to me.</p>
<p>I took the lit, math 1, and bio E sat 2s and thought I messed them up. It turns out I did okay on the lit and math 1, a 690 on each. (I only need to send in two so my 610 in bio is superfluous and inconsequential.) Are the 690 s good enough for schools like Brandeis, Oberlin, and Tufts. My GPA is only around a 3.7 (though it will be higher when my senior grades are added) but my SAT score is a 2170 and I have some great extracurriculars and volunteer work. In this context, is it worth it to retake SAT 2s to get into the 700s range?</p>
<p>How much time is available for Physics Subject Test?</p>
<p>All subject tests have 1 hour time limits.</p>
<p>I heard that the bio will be a write-on test -from the next year-not MCQ … True or false?</p>
<p>Do I have time to solve both E & M in Biology and then circle the one I am most comfortable with? and is there a break between the specific and the non-specific questions? </p>
<p>This is my first time and I still don’t know which one is to my advantage…</p>
<p>I think you have to pay extra to change which subject test you’re taking, but I’m not sure… :(</p>
<p>I hear a lot of people saying and taking practice tests on Sparknotes. But i cant find any ?:S whenever i open a sat subject test i only get the topics no practice test. I WANT TO PRACTICEEEEEEE . Anyone please tell me how to take practice tests on sparknotes for SAT Subject tests?</p>
<p>If you received a perfect score in math on your SAT I, is it okay to take Math II as one of your SAT subject tests, or would that look like you’re just phoning it in?</p>
<p>I think you only need two per school unless you apply to somewhere super smart</p>
<p>But if you do well on them, why not take more than 2-3?</p>
<p>So this question may probably be asked numerous times but I want to take Biology E and M. Do they count as two separate exams or do they count as 1 single exam? Thank you! </p>
<p>Also which exams are the “easiest” to get 800 on? I know that if I don’t make careless mistakes I will get 800 on the biology one but all of the other ones except the sciences seem harder to ace and I won’t have time to take the other sciences</p>
<p>There’s only one Biology test. You can take the E version and the M version on different days, but as far as colleges are concerned, they are both SAT Biology scores – two attempts at the same test.</p>
<p>@Sleepingaway I think that really depends on what you’re good at. For example, I’m very good at languages and I speak 5 fluently and am conversational in 4 more. I can pretty much go and do any language exam and get 800 with minimal studying. But, if you ask me to take a bio-exam, I could study for ages and ages and ages but only get a 400-500. I hate bio and I really don’t get it at all. None of the SAT IIs are hard per se as long as you know the material and understand it. </p>
<p>I think that the best policy when it comes to SAT IIs is to take them in a variety of different fields because it shows that you haven’t confined yourself to one narrow scope of expertise and/or interest.</p>
<p>How early in advance should I start studying for the SAT subject tests. I have heard a month or two should be good. I’m most likely going to take the World History test and after all my APs chem, US history, math, english lang.</p>
<p>If you’re taking a subject, you’re already studying for the test. Integrate some SAT work in with your classwork.</p>
<p>Depends on how much you’re willing to study and how much you procrastinate the studying (in my case = a lot). But if you’re taking the class, then a little bit of outside practice with SAT II help books should be enough. Be careful with the sciences though, they differ quite a bit from the AP sciences! Hope this helped!:)</p>
<p>Isn’t it a lie that harvard needs 3? because they say in their website that 2 are enough?</p>