Option 2 may be a better option? It seems pretty similar to option 1. What is the difference? In any case, many students would love the opportunity to take a practice test in real-world testing conditions without the results being reported. Count this as a blessing; and an opportunity to improve even more!
Best of luck. You have plenty of time, and you scores will likely get better.
@ItsJustSchool, I believe the benefit to option 1 is that if OP does slightly worse (they give a range, I think it’s around 100 points, but I could be wrong), they give him the benefit of the doubt, and go with the original.
OP got a 2220 on the SAT
So if he gets a 2150 on the retake, College Board will record the 2220, and cancel the 2150
If he went with option 2, he would have to stick with the 2150
How long did it take for them to respond to your attempted appeal? I am going through the same situation now and will be sending in all of my stuff this week. I want to know as soon as possible what my options are as I am a senior already accepted to college.
Does anyone know if they will give me a brand new test, an old test, a test from this year or upcoming, or even the same test as li already took. (Doubt it) My test is 2 weeks from today so i am just curious.
There are no “easier” or “harder” months. There’s plenty of data available to prove it, even. Some tests have tougher curves, but that means they have easier questions. And anyway, there’s no correlation between tough curves and any particular month.
@marvin100 Goes to show how many people don’t understand the concept of “standardized” assessments. The equating process is actually quite interesting.