<p>I've applied to the following colleges:Harvard, Yale Princeton, Stanford, MIT<-- Applied just for fun.
Penn, Cornell, UChicago, Penn State, UCBerkeley, Harvey Mudd, University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Purdue, UIUC, GA Tech, Duke</p>
<p>Do math I and math II subject tests fulfil the requirement of "two subject tests" for these colleges?</p>
<p>I know MIT requires one math and one science. But all the others just say " wo subject tests".</p>
<p>Purdue, UIUC, Penn State and GTech do not consider SAT IIs even if sent. Stanford does not require IIs but recommends that you submit two and highly recommends that if you submit a math that it be the Math 2. UChicago and UMichigan neither require nor recommend IIs but will give them some consideration if submitted. For those three colleges, since none are actually required, there is no rule one way or the other as to submitting two maths but obviously Math II would get the consideration at Stanford. All the others you list require two SAT IIs and they must be in different subjects. As you note, MIT requires a math and a science. Contrary to the above, Cornell (and Columbia) do not require a math and a science for all applicants; that requirement applies only to their engineering colleges; their liberal arts colleges require any two in different subjects.</p>
<p>for the UC’s, absolutely not. UC does not accept Math 1 at all. But even if they did “count” it would be of no help for a highly selective college; your competition for the admission slots will send two from different disciplines, so their app will beat yours.</p>
<p>The top schools would only count one of those. The top schools really don’t factor Math I in their evaluation. You should send them two different subjects.</p>
<p>They don’t state the specifics in the application information. The “strongly recommend that you send two”.</p>