<p>Hey all,
I took the SAT and got a 2100 twice.
First time: math, reading, writing (710,600,790)
Second time: (770, 700, 630).
As you can see, my superscore turns out to be a 2260, which is much higher than my individual scores. Will colleges (Ivy's) treat me like a student who scored a 2260, or will they be skeptical because I bombed the writing section the second time around?</p>
<p>same thing happened with me. I have a 2240 (760 M 680 CR 800 M) and a 2210 (750 M 760 CR 700 W) for a 2320 superscore. I’m pretty sure they only look at the superscore though, so we should be good.</p>
<p>I really hope so. Thanks!</p>
<p>I think colleges would understand that you didn’t really care about writing the second time around because you already had a 790. Some don’t even have their admissions counselors look at all scores- I don’t remember specific colleges, but I know that some have computer programs that automatically take your highest subscores when College Board gives them your scores.</p>