I have a problem! SAT Scores Sent: Do I have to Report them on application?

<p>I know it may be a stupid question, but I feel I have made a mistake.</p>

<p>SAT: 1970 (three times) 1st: 610R 660W 700M 2nd: 630R 640W 700M 3rd: 610R 650W 710M
On the last time I took it in October, I sent my four free score reports to UTAustin (automatic acceptance), Cal Berkeley, Rice, and Stanford.</p>

<p>I have taken the ACT+Writing once and scored a 32 composite, much better than the comparative SAT score of 1970. This is the score I would obviously only want the colleges to see.</p>

<p>Is there any way I can have the SAT scores already sent to these schools, but choose NOT to report them as I fill out the application and report them on it (specifically Cal Berkeley)? Will they ignore them if I do not report them? Also, I am applying to these schools as a physics major, would my SAT not be considered that bad if I got a 710 on the math section?</p>

<p>Scores once sent to colleges cannot be “unreported” to them. In fact by sending to UC Berkeley, all UCs to which you are applying now have all your scores and you do not need to even send them to the other UCs. </p>

<p>The schools use test scores sent by the official testing agencies, not what you put in application, to determine admission and thus leaving them off the app won’t change anything.</p>

<p>I assume you also sent your official ACT score to the colleges you list. If so, all the colleges to which you have applied will use that test, SAT or ACT, with the highest score to determine admission.</p>

<p>I appreciate your help! So I partially screwed myself over…? hahaha. Oh well. And do you think they’d weigh my ACT more heavily, as it is my highest score (in comparison with SAT score)?</p>

<p>I would assume the 32 will be deemed the highest test score but there could be exceptions. Many colleges consider the math and English sections of the ACT the more important and if you have a very skewed 32, such as 28 each in math and English and 36 in science and reading, it is possible a college could determine your SAT is better.</p>