Questions about the superscoring option

<p>Good day, I have 2 quick questions:</p>

<p>1) What is the difference between Version 1 and Version 2 of superscore as stated in [link removed]</p>

<p>2) If I send a superscore to colleges, will they see all of my test scores and the superscore, or just the superscore itself? For example, if I took the test twice and got 750/700/800 and then 700/800/700 in Math, CR and Writing would colleges only see the superscore of 750/800/800 or would they be able to see all 6 sub-section scores?</p>

<p>Thank you for your time.</p>

<p>Super scoring isn’t your option, it is an option that many colleges use. Some colleges do not super score at all but will use the highest single sitting score. You can report all, or just some of your scores on the common app.What you enter in the common app is not what the college will use officially. So you will need to send all scores from each single sitting to have any subscore from that date counted in the “superscore” by the college. They will make their own superscore calculation based on your official score report from college board.
“Score choice” from the college board allows you to pick and choose which dates test scores you wish to include on that official report. It is not the same as super scoring. </p>

<p>Thank you for the quick reply @VSGPeanut101 but I asked because when I was sending off a score to a college through collegeboard, it asked if I wanted to use the superscore option, so are you sure that colleges see all scores? If I were to wait until the November sitting, wouldn’t collegeboard just send the individual highest section scores to the schools which superscore? As opposed to if I send the October sitting, and then send the November sitting, in which case they would definitely see all 6 sub-section scores.</p>

<p>Did it ask you about score choice? I don’t recall ever seeing “superscore” mentioned on college board.
The score choice option they offer is for you to “hide” dates that you don’t want to share/ select the dates you do want them to see. </p>