Do colleges see subject test scores you don't send?

<p>I know it sounds like a dumb question, sorry guys! I'm just paranoid. </p>

<p>So I'm generally not a good tester in general (1900 sat and 28 act)
Well I'm even worse at the sat 2.</p>

<p>What I'm asking is if I didn't fill out any free scores to send or paid to send any scores, can colleges see my collegeboard account? There's four subject tests in there and I'd like them to think I never took them.
Thanks everyone!</p>

<p>Kinda disappointed that no one responded… I got an answer thought.</p>

<p>They won’t see them if you didn’t send them :)</p>

<p>Colleges don’t receive scores if you don’t send them at the time of taking your test.</p>

<p>When you choose to pay and send, you are allowed to selectively suppress some scores. If you don’t do that and simply pay, your entire SAT report goes with every test ever taken.</p>

<p>ACT on the other hand requires you to pay to send test. So if you took the test 3 times, you need to pay to send each test separately.</p>

<p>To confirm, this is in contrast to the SAT I where some schools that don’t superscore etc … like Yale will ask for all SAT exams no matter what? SAT II is score choice at say 99% of universities?</p>

<p>@19soccer @texaspg So if a dishonest student decides to take the SAT 10 times and jumps from a 1900 to a 2350, and decides to send only the 2350, colleges that want all scores won’t even get to know that certain scores haven’t been sent?</p>

<p>And does the same apply to SAT Subject Tests as well?</p>

<p>I’ve always wondered that jj1111, someone should chime in. If you took the SAT 10 times, and a college asked for ALL your scores, I think you could dishonestly send them your 3 best.</p>

<p>It is expected that you follow each school’s rules when sending your scores. If they want all, you are required to send all.</p>

<p>I am explaining to OP how score choice works when you are submitting scores and answering the question about whether colleges receive the scores just because he took the test, not how to cheat.</p>

<p>If people want to bring in topics such as Asians cheating when cheating is not the topic, they will lose posting privileges.</p>

<p>@texaspg, Hahah, sorry, but that was just a way of saying. I just wanted to ask that if you choose not to abide by the college’s policy do they even get to know?</p>

<p>Do they get to know is not something I care to answer since it is not a relevant question. CC is not a place to get help to be dishonest.</p>

<p>There are enough colleges out there which don’t care which scores you supress in order not to apply and try to lie to other colleges which want to see all your scores.</p>

<p>A 1900 isn’t even bad. You’re in the 90th percentile.</p>

<p>@texaspg hahaha, I’m not planning on doing so, I have nothing to hide at all from colleges. I just wanted to know what happens from someone who knows what happens.
@xCossack but a 2300 is much better right?</p>