<p>if you qualify for every aspect of the college except for SAT II's, would the college actually reject you... or what if you had in the 600's or one really bad one in the 400's and stuff like that ... my question is would a college actually reject you because of your sat 2's</p>
<p>Of course they would</p>
<p>When you look at highly competitive colleges, they look at everything</p>
<p>while high satiis will be smiled upon--have you ever heard of someone being rejected from harvard because one of their satiis didn't make the cut?</p>
<p>concentrate on ecs and hanging out with friends than overly stressing with the satiis</p>
<p>when u apply to a college like harvard they weed out all the low SAT first then the move onto the SATII's its very important for top schools becuase basically everyone that applies did well on the SAT</p>
<p>EC's? How about grades, to start</p>
<p>Grades + SAT I's are the most important things</p>
<p>According to the Academic Index Calculator (on CC),
SAT I, 3 top SAT II's, rank or weighted GPA, goes into the calc.</p>
<p>they are probably the scores that have the most variation becuase well applying to harvard almost everyone has a 3.8 or up and high 1400-1600 SAT scores so if u plan to apply to those schools u better make sure that ur SATII's are there as well</p>
<p>SATIIs are actually quite important because they test something tangible unlike the SATs. I read in 'The Guide to Getting In' that colleges have a harder time excusing low SATIIs because theres no excuse... Of course SATIIs aren't weighted as much as SATs, however.</p>
<p>SAT II's are weighted as much as SAT's. A lot of schools all up your total on all your SAT's. Like for example, you get points at UCSD, and they do this formula: [(SAT I)+(SAT II)+(SAT II)] x 0.8 to get your points for the SAT, so often they are as important as the I.</p>