I am slightly confused with the process of sending in scores.
I am sending in my ACT score, which is a 33 superscored (from taking 2 acts) and a 32 in one sitting
But I also took Math 2, Chem, and US History in the same sitting
I got an 800 in math and 720 in chem but got a horrid score in history because I went in blind and not think about this.
I am reaching for schools like Duke, U Michigan, and Boston College.
Is it possible for me to send in my act scores and just my math 2 and chem subject test score?
If the schools you’re applying to allow Score Choice, then yes, you can just send those scores.
and if it does not allow Score Choice? is there a way around it?
No. No score choice=all scores sent
:-S
@mytosies How do you know if you used score choice? I haven’t taken the SAT yet but I have taken 2 subject tests and I am not proud of those scores so I’m retaking them in November. So do I pick the scores I want to send? I’m so confused about this process and then when is the deadline for using this? I couldn’t find it on collegebaord. Does it also work for AP scores??
When you go on the collegeboard website and go to your SAT scores, there’s an option in the upper right hand corner that say “send scores.” When you select that, it takes you through the process of selecting the schools you want to send the scores to, and then you have the option of selecting which scores you send to which schools. If you don’t do anything, the school will receive all test scores from all SAT dates, but if you do use score choice, the school will only receive the scores that you choose to send. The deadline is the date on which you choose to send in your SAT scores, and you can HYPOTHETICALLY use this for any college. Some institutions, however, such as Yale and, I believe, Stanford, require all of your scores from all test dates, so if you use score choice on those applications, you risk getting any possible acceptance rescinded for academic dishonesty, so check the policy of the school you’re applying to before using scorechoice. As for AP scores, these are self-reported on the Common App, so you can withhold however many you like. Schools typically don’t request an AP score report until after a student is accepted, and at that point it just matter for credit, so a score lower than the credit cut off will only mean no credit for that score. I hope this helps!