<p>Will Cornell admissions officers see all your sat II and SAT I scores, or will there be like something of a post-it note attached to the file giving these general stats which only shows the highest?</p>
<p>They see them all but only consider the highest SAT I scores and highest SAT II scores if you took the same test more than once. So they do know how many times you have taken each test and on which dates and what your scores were each time you took the test.</p>
<p>The ACT is different because you specify which test date you want sent. Advantage is you don't have to show them low scores. Disadvantage is that you may have done well on one subtest on one day and well on another subtest on another day and unless you send both day's worth of scores in, you can't combine them like you can the SAT.</p>
<p>Admissions officers should see all of your scores at any you apply to. Check out the College Board link about "sent scores". Both S and D had higher SATI scores in June than in October. For schools added to their list after October 1 all sets of scores have now been sent. Even for schools where you must submit SATII scores-if for example, subject tests were taken in December-when those scores are sent ALL prior scores of SATI and II are sent to the schools. I actually called the College Board about this two days ago. Remember that schools generally look at your highest SAT scores in each area. It is my understanding that ACT's though are not "superscored". Hope this helps.</p>
<p>A few schools do superscore the ACTs, the most prominent ones being WUSTL and possibly UChicago. I don't believe that Cornell does it though.</p>
<p>Cornell does superscore ACT as does MIT, Carnegie Mellon, Brown and U-Rochester</p>
<p>UPenn and Columbia do not sueprscore</p>
<p>just ones that I've called on and have spoken directly with admissions on.</p>
<p>^^ Are you sure that the person you contacted knew what they were talking about? I remember reading a few threads regarding this topic and it seems that the people in the Cornell admissions office gave contradicting statements, almost as if they didn't know the difference between the SAT and the ACT.</p>