<p>Hi. I am a US permanent resident living abroad willing to apply for the spring 14 session for the computer science major. I have taken my SAT 1 already, but I am really confused as to which subjects I should select for my SAT 2. I will be taking Math Level 2 and Physics for sure, but I cant figure out what other subject I should select. Initially I thought I would go for chemistry,but the problem is that I find chemistry quite difficult and more importantly Computer Science has no relation with chemistry whatsoever. It is more related to maths and so I now feel like I should be selecting Math level 1 as the third subject. However, most people say that taking both Math level 1 and level 2 would be a stupid idea as level 1 is not given much importance by most universities. In that case, should I go for chemistry or should I just take two subjects( Math Level 2 and Physics)? By the way, the universities that I will be applying for do not list SAT subject tests as mandatory or recommended( I will be applying for Purdue, Rutgers, University of Washington, Stony Brook and Rensselaer Polytechnic). If I take this into consideration then 2 subjects might be good enough for me but I still want to take three subjects just to increase my chances and boost my profile.</p>
<p>You should cancel the idea of trying to study for a 3rd Subj test and just focus on the first two.</p>
<p>Purdue, Rutgers, UWashington and Stony Brook do not use SAT subject tests for admission. For Renssalear, which states that it admits only a limited number of students in spring, subject tests (two of them) are required only for certain accelerated programs (not CS); otherwise they are optional. If you take any math and a science for it you will be fine. Taking a third test won’t add anything if you already have two good scores.</p>
<p>M L1 + ML2
. They aren’t considered as 2 different subject test</p>
<p>Don’t bother taking both math 1 and math 2.</p>
<p>Check each university you apply to in order to find out what it wants. If math 2 and physics cover all requirements and recommendations for the universities you apply to, you can either skip the third test, or take any third test whose material you know well and are confident of getting a high score in.</p>