I’ve taken the SAT Twice. 1420 Both Times, but a composite of 1480. Will schools require me to submit all my scores? Or am I allowed to submit the verbal from Test 1 and the Math from Test 2?
Thanks.
I’ve taken the SAT Twice. 1420 Both Times, but a composite of 1480. Will schools require me to submit all my scores? Or am I allowed to submit the verbal from Test 1 and the Math from Test 2?
Thanks.
<p>you cannot score report with the SAT's. when you ask the collegeboard to send the scores, ALL scores in thier files are submitted, including SAT 1's and SAT II's, for every time you took the test. (note, AP scores have to be requested separately)</p>
<p>What you pay for when you send scores is a Score Report. Upon this score report are ALL official SAT I and SAT II scores. Score supression is no longer available -- that means, all colleges receiving your SAT scores will see all scores and will choose what to do with them.</p>
<p>AP scores are sent by a different request, but work the same way (except that you can pay a per-college, per-score fee to repress scores if you really want to).</p>
<p>But the thing is, I didn't tell the collegeboard to send my scores when registering for the SAT. I left the school list blank. What is this business about mixing and matching top scores?</p>
<p>When you actually send in the applications, colleges require that you contact CollegeBoard to send them an official Score Report. This is almost always required or your application is considered incomplete. (It doesn't matter what you told CollegeBoard when you registered for the test.) When you pay and send this Score Report to the colleges you apply to, as undecided said above, your entire score history is sent to the schools. The schools can then decide whether they prefer to look at your highest total score in a single sitting, or look at your highest part scores regardless of when each occurred. You don't decide what they see: they see it all, and decide what they want to concentrate on and how they want to evaluate your test results. (Some schools will tell you they will only look at your highest single-sitting total, for instance.)</p>