<p>Yeah, I went up in writing, to increase my composite a whole 30 points, but will colleges look at this (like some of the straight meds im applying to) and say, "this kid did worse 3rd time around, he must really suck."? Or will they just look at the highest score?</p>
<p>im in the same boat as u and would like to know if colleges even look at ur worst score</p>
<p>I took the test in dec to try and improve and i had a cold couldnt sleep cuz i was anxious and ended up doing horrible like i feel like **** now that i have my scores back i droped 80 points in math and 60 in CR and on the practice test i was scoring the same in math and above in cr I had 800 630 bfor on practice test i was scoring (minus 1) -800 in math and anywhere from 670-750 in CR so *** happened im worried schools will look at it and be like ***</p>
<p>Ha yeah I'm in a similar situation. I took the SATs the first time in May and then took them again this month.
I ended up dropping 40 points in reading from a 600 to a 560 and dropped in math from a 740 to a 680. Fortunately, I did raise my writing score from a 560 to a 610 so my best composite actually went up...but still.</p>
<p>well I'm not a wise man or anything, but from what I've heard around the boards... the adcoms only see your top score because a secretary will take the top scores from all the sections (if schools take your highest comp.) and put it on the final sheet that the admission officers actually see. just what I've heard.</p>