<p>I have to submit my score reports to colleges by November 1st, but I don't know how to include my October test score results. My colleges don't want me to rush the scores, so is there any way I can wait until Oct 28 (when the scores will be released) and still send them in on time?</p>
<p>You had to request score reports before October 20, which is stated on the website. If you order them on October 28, you have to rush it.</p>
<p>Some schools do not accept rush scores just as OP said. Did you include that school for free score reports on the test? That is usually the case when a school accept the latest test score close to the application deadline.</p>
<p>If I sent two different score reports to one college electronically, would the college only receive the most recent one or would they see them both? </p>
<p>I ask this only because I sent in my January + May scores in one report last week, and just my October test scores in a different report today…</p>
<p>I’ve probably visited over 20 FAQ sites, and I’m still just really confused. Please help…</p>
<p>One thing you ahould determine is whether the ED or EA college accepts test scores that arrive after Nov 1. Almost all of of them do and you can send regular delivery. Many of them, such as all the ivies, even accept Nov SAT test scores for ED or EA. The small number that actually require the tests to be in their hands Nov 1 tell you that on their sites. If you are not certain when reviewing info on the college’s site, check whether it accepts the Oct ACT for ED or EA. If so, it accepts scores sent after Nov 1 because those ACT scores won’t even be released until second week of Nov.</p>
<p>If you ordered earlier SAT tests sent last week and the latest test sent today, the college will receive both sets. Your latest send of the Oct test will even include your earlier tests again unless you exercised score choice to prevent them from being sent. Note that colleges are used to getting multiple sets of tests from applicants. As to which they consider depends on rule followed by college; majority of public colleges and minority of private colleges use that test with highest composite; majority of private colleges and minority of public superscore by using the highest section scores from the multiple tests.</p>