<p>I understand there isn't one all-inclusive answer for this, but I am wondering about the general trend. If one applies to a school that superscores, does the admissions committee still see all of the scores from all test dates? Are they are listed on the sheet that goes into the "decision room", or do most schools actually have someone seperately write out the highest scores from each test date and that is all the committee sees? I am not really interested in top-tier colleges, more the smaller LACs.</p>
<p>When you send your SAT scores, all scores on the SAT I and all SAT II scores are sent along for the ride.</p>
<p>However, don't fret if you bombed a section; most colleges take a "superscore"; they consider your top CR, writing, and math scores as one sat, even if your best scores come from 3 seperate tests.</p>
<p>Also, colleges consider scores with +/- 30 points. So if you get a 650, they consider you to be 620-680 on whatever section.</p>
<p>Most colleges don't care about less than 3 tries on the SAT. Most don't like more than 4.</p>
<p>Hope that helps you out.</p>
<p>i dont think the admissions committee sees all. At stanford, a secretary combines the highest scores of all sections and that wat the admission commitees see.</p>
<p>Yeeeeeeeeeeep.</p>
<p>Yes, at Ivies they see them all. That is why though they use the superscore method, it is not encouraged to take the test too many times.</p>
<p>Which is the best book to prepare for SAT</p>
<p>depends
if you want sth tougher than the SAT get Barrons
but the 10 real test give u a true perspective</p>