<p>This is the Princeton Forum, so I ask here a follow-up question about a statement I earlier found in the Harvard Forum. </p>
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<p>This theme is echoed in EVERY SINGLE admissions book written by ex-Ivy League admissions officers that I could find in the local bookstore, including ones who worked at Dartmouth, Princeton, Harvard and Yale.
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<p>My follow-up question is, has anyone ever found a statement by a Princeton admission officer anywhere that it is disadvantageous to take the SAT I more than exactly one time? I'm not attributing any motives to the person who made the CC post cited above, nor am I saying that I have concluded whether or not I agree with the post. I am simply asking where, and in what terms, a statement was made by a Princeton admission officer about how Princeton treats applications from applicants who submit more than one SAT I score. I am also asking, as I have asked before, whether any statement from an admission officer on the issue is more focused and specific than Harvard's Web site statement "We consider a student's best test scores."</p>
<p>I beg the pardon of participants in this thread for continuing the thread hijack. The original question in the thread is whether an applicant who declined an ED offer from Princeton would be admitted to Harvard in the regular admission round, and I am curious about that issue too.</p>