I just walked out of my ACT testing room about 5 hours ago, and while I was walking out I was talking about how amazing my essay was but they told me that colleges don’t really care about the essay. Is this entirely true? I’m assuming it depends on the college- my first choice when I start applying in June is Duke, and I feel like Duke might factor in the essay because they’re so competitive.
Just got my son’s writing score and it was a 12. Obviously happy and surprised, zero prep but that’s how he rolls. I have to hope that it helps him somewhat in the application process. Maybe?
I got into Yale with an 8/12 on the writing section. From what I understand, admission officers don’t care too much about writing scores, seeing as how they’re able to get a better grasp of your writing abilities from the essays on your application. I consider myself a fairly talented and don’t view the writing scores as very indicative of an individual’s writing skills.
My kid had a single-sitting ACT composite of 34 and did quite poorly on the writing. So poorly, in fact, that we paid for a rescore, thinking it was a mistake. (They did not change the score.) He has dysgraphia and there’s a possibility that they simply couldn’t read his writing, but whatever it was: super low score, comparatively.
He was accepted early to his top choice (a school with a 22% admission rate).
As was said already, a great writing score certainly can’t hurt. But the scoring for the ACT writing is so goofy, I don’t think a poor score amidst a competitive application really hurts you, either.