<p>LD families (parents or students):</p>
<p>Any experience -- timed-practice or formal recorded -- with both tests? I'm especially looking for info from those who were not granted accommodation (or who chose not to avail themselves).</p>
<p>Here's the sitch:
D is LD, but initial diagnosis (write-up) seems to indicate accommodation would not necessarily be granted, just because she's so bright & compensates so well in various areas of the diagnostic testing. Yet the diagnostic testing hardly simulates the classroom or standardized testing, so the conclusion is preposterous, i.m.o. And she presents as a classic accomm. case for a variety of reasons. (Her "compensating IQ" does NOT translate to h.s.testing situations in particular.) I need further clarification on diag.test results, but let's assume she will not get accommodated.</p>
<p>(1) I've been told by other LD parents & professionals that an even longer SAT I seating is not necessarily a help, & may be a hindrance. That would seem to accord with my D's experience with the practice PSAT, which she found grueling in 3 parts. Her <em>worst</em> result was the last test, which is her strongest area (writing!); I questioned her: she said it was the length. She basically just lost it. (i.e., the focus)</p>
<p>(2) I've been in favor of the greater "recognizability" of the ACT with regard to its correlation to classroom learning. (Thus less confusing/disorienting than SAT.) However, one parent I spoke with revealed that her D did no better with ACT than with SAT.</p>
<p>(3) Did any kind of test prep -- formal or informal, light or heavy, group or individual -- assist appreciably with results for <em>either</em> SAT or ACT?</p>
<p>Bottom line: Should I even sweat this, folks? With the money, time, emotional hurdles, stress, & fighting with Collegeboard anticipated, should we just choose whichever of the 2 standardized testing formats will likely yield the "best possible" result, accept a State College with her 3.75 from an extremely rigorous private school & fabulous e.c.'s, & just move on?</p>